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Volume 23 


Council Has Quiet 
Session Last Monday 


Set Rates For Rent on ‘The 
fMouses. neverted to Town 


With ouly HAT the councillors ! 


Present al wie reguiar meeting 
Ol the toun council last nonday 
evening tne session passed off 
quietiy. he mayor ‘vas in the 
Chur ana councilorg Brydle. 
ANeWOAM BiG Sanuerson pres- 
ent. : 

Arter the disposal of the min- 
utes Mr. H. Dacre waited on 
council and made application to 
tent small building on Broad: 
way jJUSU east of Ubear’s garage 
As the building was not occup 
leu 1t was rented to Mr. Dacre. 

Mr. Conradt asxed Council 
for material to repair hs build- 
ing on sitth St. Same was 
granted, 

A letter was read from Mr. 
usborne’s solicitor askirg town 
“10 pay storage on machinery 
Stored In Oy suoe factory build 
mg sume ume. ‘Ine matter 
was ieit with solicitor baird 


tor investigation on motion of 
ws Newnuam and Bry- 


An offer of $35.00 was made 
for the Lyons property on Third 
street. The offer was “not ac- 


Accounts as passed by the 
finance committeé were approv 
ed for payment. 

Council setérates of rents for 
houses whieh have reverted to 
' the town since thie last tax sale. 
end which-are not. occupied by 
the previous owners. It. was 
also decided that in future rents 
en all such buildings be paid to 
the town. 

™ og. in accord 

rt the amendment» to 

the town act, was mentioned, 
hut it was pointed out th:t be- 
‘ture this eould be done the ques 
tion would have to be submitted 
to the ratepnvers to vote upon 
at the next municipal election 


———— 


Fareweli vatu... g 
For Boweil Farther 


Jus. Mywes Leaving Next 
Week For U.S. 


A very enjoyable farewell 
party was held at the 101.¢ 0° 
Mr, Jim’ Myers on Monday 
evening, when a large nuuber 
of iriends from the nsigt.bor 
houd gathered to wish 11m wei! 
on the eve of his departure for 
iia new home in the. United 
S.ates. A delightful time wa 
sment a’ cards and dancing. 
Nelicioug refreshments + ere 
tuved by the ladies. Many 
vere the expressions of regret 
ti.at a good friend anid neigh. 
' hor of mapy years was about 

10 leave’ the district. But it 
was also quite evident that the 
very best wishes of his friends 
wil go. with Mr, Myers to his 
new home in Idaho. 


* sed Dome ber the Bg coast. 


“| beard. 


+|Official Visits Vega. 


Lodge Last Evening 


Tieasant Social Hour | Speni 
After The Meeting 


Mrs. M. Davis, of Calgary, | 
pesident of Rebekah Grand! «'udents 


ichlge paid an official visit to) 
Vega Lodge No. 97 last evening. | 
She gave a very inspiring ad- 


dress wh'ch was much enjoyed | , 


»y all present. 
After the business meeting 


a Pleasant social hour baie st ‘ 


Cuving which Mrs. Davis. w 
yo88esseg a very fine voice, sang 
vc solos which were greatly 


enjoyed. The loca} lodge also * Wade 


presented Mrs. Davis with : 
lovely afternoon tea set asa 
rork of their appreciation of 
ler visit. 


While in town the visiting 


eters were shown through the 
Glass’ Plant ari the Pottery: 
hey. Ware. intensely interested 
om products turned 
ie e plants. Mrs. 
‘ivisleaves for Torcnto today 
“Attend a meeting of Covereign 

rand Lovge. 

A —--—- 


220 LIVES: LOST 
IN* SEA DISASTER 


In the neighborhood of 150 


ves were lost last Saturday 
when the three million dollar 
juxury liner “Morro Castle’ 
. ent up ip flames 30 miles from 


‘ew York, and eight miles off 


oe aeetoning from 


ist week: cimourcing the ceaih oh at 
on Aug 16th, of 
Ny. Benjamia Swanson. who for 
number of years farmed n 
tre Bowell district, 
vag One of its most highly re 


Pad” crew 9 


‘Lightning is said ta have 


‘truck the ship and set an oil]. 
tank on fire. 


is alk 


Ch rakes 


‘OKVDON MEMORLAL 
UNITE.) CHt RCH 


Pastor: Rev. K. Erskine Pow 
10 a. m. Church School 
11.15 Morning: Service. 
Subject: “The Leader as Fol- 
wer”? 
83 p. m. Service at Bowell. 
7:30 p m. Evening w rshin. 
Subject: “The Preeminence 
©? the Soul” 
“They joy before Th-e accor: 
ing to the joy in harvesi ” 


* - 


ST. MARY’S CHURCH 


Celebration of Mass. every 
Sunday of each month except 
first Sunday, at 8:30 a. m. 


ST. AMBROSE : HURCH 


Rev. H, S, Hamnett, Vicar. 

unday Sept. 16th 1984 - 16th 
Sunday after Trinity, 

No 8 o'clock celebration, 

11.00 a. m. Childrens Annua! 
Flower Service. 

7,30 p.m Evensong, 

Wetinesday aud Saturday (1° 
‘and 22nd) Ember Days Mat. 
irs and Litany at 10,00 a. m. 

Friday Ember Day and St 
Matthew's Day: Hely Com 
1 union at 9,00 a. m. Matins an’! 
I tany at 10.00 a. m. 

Will all Worsh'pers at St. 
Ambrose please note that the 
Harvest Thanksgiving Services 
vill be postponed from fept. 2° 
to Sept. 30. on account of th» 
United Church Anniversary be- 


*]ing held on the former date. 


OUR SLOGAN: ay Industrial Metropolis of Industrious People Who Pull Together, 


THE REDCLIFF REVIEW 


Singing Class is 
Formed at the School 


Is Under Direction of Mr. Ret 
Bullen, of M@licing Hat 


A splendid number of school 


music classes, and a most enter 
instructive lesson 

The next 1esson 
given next Tuesday 
*“teynoon at 4.15 at the school. 

This is a wonderful opportun 
ity for parents to give their 
children first class training for 
sriall outlay of money. 
The lassons are only 25 cents, 


cass for adults if a sufficient . 
_| ey or director. are ta'en up. 


In what better way could any 
«he spend one evening a week 
in developing a talent 
fhom which so much pleasure 
pnd. profit may be Merived. 
i.essons for adults may also be 
lad for 25 cents each. 
cne interested should communi- 
‘ote with any. of the teachers 
»* any member of the school 
beard for further ‘nformation. 


Bowell Distect Passes 


y. Benjamin Swanson fiat des 
Wittuipeg, August 16t, : 


momma | |) 
Deceased who was 83 years 
of age, leaves three dsughters 
Mr. Allan ano 
Mrs. McCullogh, 
Man., Mrs. Tufts, of Saakatoou- 4j change wi 
Mrs. Jack Dickson, poe ga _— 
fvrd, flask anid Lorne, bala 
‘Yhe remains were interved in 
Manitou, where deceased lived | ,., orniagg when the end caine. 
for a number of years befoie 
coming to this district, 
Se” acne 
VanWert building 
Uroadway is now being covere;’ 
“ith sheet metal. 


on |s*-ters, Mirs, Sangster of Red- 


Mr and Mrs R» Pickering of|y:d Brian all of Drumaeller. 
are at present 
eee their sons here and in 
2 lye For th he desire to visit 
"rs. Pickering were among the | +. *, 5, out to the bereaved or those whe desire 
vieneer residentts of Redcliff | ,.., ‘_ eR _ hour of|/"astern Canada during the 
and are always heartily weleom 
ed by the old timers. 


Portland, Ore. 


eee oe Bene eeeeeeeoseseeee 


BARGAIN 


CENT-A-MILE 


TO BANFF 
and Return 
Fares apply from All Stations in 


Good Going 
Sept. 14and 15 


Returning Leave 
Banff up to Sept. 18 


Ask your focal Agent for Fares 
information 


CANADIAN 
PACIFIC 


pccsdaccceooovonccoseoese 


MTTTTI I) 


“HURSDAY SEPT. 18th, 1934 


Local Coal Mine Official Receiver 

Here on October 4th Still | Going Strong For Farmers ers Appointed 

Hag ‘Been Arranged 7 = Cicer Givwing a and Coal is|W. Huckvale of Medirise Hes 
Hector Lang M: L. A. Giving Entire Satisfxction For This Distric: . 


j ~_ 


ilustrated. Lecture 


Mr. Hector Lang, M. L. A : 
ior this constituency, has nade} the coal mine in connection} The selection of official re- 


“la: rangements with Mr. Donald|\\ith the Gunderson Brick &|ceivers under the farmers cred- 


Cameron, B. A. to give ong of| Coal Co. here, has had . won-jitors debt arrangement legiste, 
dys lectures in Cliff Hall her. |4« fully ruccessful run ‘or the| ton wag anounced last weel.- 
‘n Thursday evening Oct.4th. °}0st year. Miners have ieen|end for Alberta. This is . the 

Mr. Cameron, who ig connect-|* Ployed continuously and the {pal preparations for the farm- 
éd with Extention departinent|:'cl being shipped is giving |c"e of the three prairie provin- 
ct the University of Alberta,| tire satisfaction to their grow |c’s to avail themselve,; of the 
has chosen as his subject: “'The| (gz list of customers. ! 1ovisions of the act. 
tolk High Schools in Sean-| The plant is in excellant} Mr. W. Huckvale, of Medicina 
Gavia,” which deals with ed-|s' ape for handling the order: | Hot, hasbeen appointed the of- 
uvition for aldults in which reg |"ud the management is looking | ficial receiver for this district. 
vlar and systematic study of|{¢rward to even better times! The act provides for aa ac- 
some on-vocational subjects|luring the coming fall and jrengement and adjustment 0” 
under the guidance of 4 lectur-| Winter. farmers’ debts. Those concern: 

Farmers anid ranchers of the |€d should interview Mr. Huck- 
evrreunding district will als | vale as soon as possible. 
hi able to have ther wants sui 
plied at thig plant. 

ediioci actions { 
Spring Plowing Has 

Preference Over Fall} Norm Shearer comes to the 
; motion picture screen efter an 

eesence of some  eigi.teen 
ionths as the glamorous hero- 
ine of “Riptide’,” her nuw Metro 
Goidwyn- Mayer starv'ng veh- 
ie which opens Monday at the 
Aonarch Theatre. 

The story, written especially 
‘or Miss Shearer, was suthored 
»y Edmund Goulding, who also 
d-ected the picturization of 
his sereen play. 

Goulding, who has: wi itten 
numerous screen i an er pe 


Y.e address will be illustrated 
With lantern slides, and it will 
bo free to all interested 

This lecture, we are sure, 
vill prove highly interesting 
educational and instructive, and: 
should be well attended ‘by both 
old and young. 


Norma Shearer Comes 
As Glamorous Heroine 


Ig Result of Experiments at th» 
Lacombe Farm. | 


avd all have been thoroughly 
enjoyad. . 


Drumheller Lady 
j Died tere Tuesday 


With her he ater Mrs, 


After studying the question 
of fall versus spring ploughing 
* stubble laud for a number ot 
yearg ct the Expermentai 
Farm Lacombe, it is believed 
‘hat fall ploughing of stubble 
land cannot bé recommended 
except when it. is particularly 
free m: vee and contains 


feb? sara in th: fl- erat 
urand Hotel.” 

Robert Montgomery, whe has 
* peared! in a number of Miss 
Chealrer’s screen snecesses. 
ein.res leading © man honors 

‘th Robert Marshall in he. 
aew film. 

included | in the PES 
vast are such famous stage and 
screen names as Mrs. Patrick 
‘ampbell, Skeets Gallager, 
Rulph Forbes, Lilyan Tashman, 
Arthur Jarrett, Ear! Oxford” 
Huien Jerome Eddy, George K. 

Arthur, Baby Mairilyn Spinnert 
‘hyllis Cochlan, Howard Chade 
cot argl Haliiwell Hobbes. 

Mrs. Cambell, hailed «3 one 
«7 England’s most distinguish- 
ei actresses and noted for her | 
great tr mph in the vheatre as 
makes her film debut in the 
makes her film debut in the 
Snearer picture, playing the 
eemedy role of Aunt etty. 

The picture is lavishly mount 
‘4 and Miss Shearer wears an 
elaborate wardrobe of startling 
new creations designed for her 
iy Adrian, famous screen styl- 
ist. Because of the tremend- 
rus amount of interest attach: 
ed to the new wardrobe, and to 
mard against possible dupli- 

ition by fashion “racketeers,” 
the new Shearer gowns have 
‘een kept secret from publis 


g.ven mt the fall iontd ah sive’; 
vith the disk or cultivator ra: 
t. er than the plough. 

Fall ploughing can be recom- 
‘:ended only under the most. 
favourable conditions and 
sould be worked down ag $90: 
as possible to prevent drying 
cut. Soil drifting has ‘levelon: 

od as a serious objection to fall 
poughing asa result of urus- 
urlly dry weather coupled witt 
high winds. The better the zon 
dition in which the fall plougt - 
ig is left from a moisture cor.- 
scrvation standpoint, the great: 
er the tendancy there is for the 
sil to drift. The obkjection- 
c'ted tend to cause fall plough- 
ing to be considered with less 
favor with each succeedin,” 
year. 


Miss Margaret Smith early 
ii.esday morning. 

The young woman, who was 
oply twenty- five years of age, 
nad been in poor health since 
.une and had come from her 
tome in Drumheller, to visit 
her sister Mrs. H. Sangster. 


veneficial. Her condition. 


however,  grajdually became 
mere serious until Tuesday 


D 


She leaves to mourn net loss 
tar father and mother Mr. and 
\rs. Smith of Drumheller, four 


f, Mrs, Jos. Whittle Mrs. F 
Carruthers, and Miss Pearl, and 
cree brothers,. Joseph, John 


o-oo 
(JIEAP FARES NOW ON 


‘nterment will be made at TO WASTERN CANADA 


‘umheller on Friday. 
The sympathy of their many 


cayly Fall when the apple and 
iad wruit harvest is at its height, 
CENT-A-MILE FARES snouncement by the Can- 
TO BANFF ON ¢. P. R.|.dian Pacific of bargain fares 
Attractive cent-a-mile fay} °%s an economical trip, 
to Banff and return are beirg| ‘Tickets will be on sale Sept. 
oered by the Canadiar Pacific, °1 to Oct. 2 from stations west 
f cpt, 14 an} 15th with retur:| - Port Arthur to stations east 
ui til Cept, 8th, from Banff, of Sijdbury, with return limit 
September is usually a delight-|of thirty days. Tickets wil) 
tul month in the mount ing and} be honored in coaches or in tour) 
the announcement will be w-a | ist sleepers at slightly higher} Messrs Clive and Jimmy Nes- 
comed by lovers of beauty ag un | ‘é¢s plus berth charge, Katt, of Calgary, have taken 
‘,portunity to spend a fw days| Coach return fares as an-|c‘er the management of th. 
al the famous mountain resort. ncunced by Mr. A. R. Ballantyne | Bassano Mail, which was at one 
Mr, Balantyne, ticket agent,|€ P. R. ticket agent, are, from|tiine owned and opperated by 
hows full particulars aad will bo|Pedcliff to Toronto $3770; to|tbeir father L. D. Nesbitt, who 
pleased to give any information|ttawa $38.16; to Mentreal|is now superintendent of the 
<i $40.40, and ‘ull particulars will|Aiberta Wheat Pool Publicity 
Mr. and Mrs. J. Kilthva and- bh» gladly given regarding other 
family who have been tasming! fores upon application. 
novth ef town, are leaving this ttentiivliniones 
veek end for Barhead, Alberta} Mr. Clark Jarobson has pur-|and the Review wishes them 
where Mr. Kilthau has purchas-|«haseyl the house recently own- 
oc} a farm. ed and occupled by Bast! Tonks. undertaking, 


4 


5 
5 

. 

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5 

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2 
s 

$ 

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TEA 


"Fresh from the Gardens” 
a ), Now’ It Could Be Done , 


Probably it is as direct reaction to the appalling state of irritant un- 
rest which keeps international nerves continually on edge that more is being 
written and heard now of peace and its perpetuation than was heard or writ- 
ten during the great fiasco which terminated in the framing of the Treaty 


of Versailles. 
The Anglo-Saxon world, at least, 


has come to the conclusion that a 


treaty inspired by revenge and nurtured by fear is altogether too provoca- 
tive an instrument to produce anything more than a mere armistice or 
truce, That section of the world now is convinced’ that the Christian virtues 
of humility and fraternity could and would provide a better background for 
an abiding peace featuring the essential conditions of harmony and mutual 


co-operation. 


It is hard to concede that mankind is devoid of capacity to bring about 
this condition or state. In fact, when one scans the war efforts of the bel- 
ligerent nations between 1914 and 1918, one is forced to conclude that only 


the Will is lacking. Were the efforts made then to destroy life and property If, ex, he gubdues it at once by 


exerted now to preserve life and property, world peace quickly would be 


achieved. There is no doubt of it. ° 


If doubts be cherished, they would quickly be dissipated by reference 


to the recently published “War Memoirs” of David Lloyd George. 


Britain’s Minister of Munitions then as her premier, Mr. Lloyd George was 


primarily responsible for organizing the country’s human and industfial re- | 
sources for victory. How far-reaching, how extensive that organization | 


was, is vividly revealed in the pages of his narrative: All essential indus- 


tries were brought within the compass of his authority. All were made to} 
contribute their full quota to the national effort. 


tion was established for the dual purpose of building up the allied, and of | safe elephant. 


That gigantic organiza- 


breaking down the enemy, capacity to endure. The achievement shows con- 
clusively what can be done by organization on the grand scale. 

Considering the efficacy of war-time organization and effort, surely it 
is not foolhardy to suggest that, were all the major nations of the world to 
unite in organizing in the cause of peace, lasting and prosperous peace 


would ensue. 


And were the same efforts applied to solving the economic 


problems of the peoples of the world unquestionably they, too, would yield. 

It is a strange commentary on civilization and human progress that 
sacrifices to win a war should be described as “heroic” and, as such, borne 
with determination and a grin, while sacrifices to win a peace should be 


branded, as humiliating and intolerable. 


-It is strange, too, that war could 


be financed with no insuperable difficulty, while finances required in an eco- 
nomic depression to keep innocent people from starvation, present appar- 
ently insurmountable obstacles to the governments concerned. 

Nicholas Murray Butler, noted American liberal, recently translated 
the financial cost of the world war into graphic and startling terms. It cost 


400 billion dollars. 


“With that money,” he says, “we could have built a 
$2,500 house, furnished it with $1,000 worth. of furniture, placed it on five 
acres of.land worth $100 an acre, and given this home to each and every 
family in the United States, Canada, Australia, England, Scotland, Wales, 
ireland, France, Belgium, Germany and Russia. We could have given to 
each city of 20,000 inhabitants and over in each country named, a five mil- 
lion dollar library and a ten million dollar university. Out of what was left 


we could have set aside a sum at five per cent. that would provide a $1,000 
yearly salary for 125,000 teachers, and a like salary for another army of 


125,000 nurses.” 


Four hundred billion dollars was expended in a war which tock 30,000,- 


“000 lives. Surely, a similar amount expended in a peace, would save a 


similar number from sufferings attendant upon economic depression. 


Five Million Dollars Removed From 
Hold Of Steamer Laurentic 

Bullion valued at £1,000,000 ($5,- 
000,000), was removed by a private 
salvage firm from the sunken 
steamer Laurentic, which went to the 
bottom with a German torpedo in 
1917, the London Mail says. 

Admiralty divers salvaged £5,000,- 
000 between 1918 and 1924 and 
abandoned the remaining £1,000,000 
because the ship had been smashed 
and buried in the sand. 

Salvage operations on the steam- 
ship Laurentic, a 15,000-ton White 
Star liner which lay in 120 feet of 
water, are known to be among the 


_ most difficult ever attempted. 


British navy divers clad in sybber 
suits made more than 5,000 dives’ to 


recover £5,000,000 worth of on. kg! : 


The Laurentic was sunk 
mouth of Lough Swilly in our Sag 
Ireland, in a position exposed to 
westerly and northwesterly gales. 


Belongs To England 
The origin of the tune “God Save 
the King,” has always been a matter 


for argument, ‘but most authorities 
agrfe on one point, that it is Eng- 
. It-was “adopted” by the Prus- 


Mail By Rocket 


German Invention May Shoot Letters 
From Dover To Calais 

A rocket mail service may be 
established between Dover, Eng-| 
land, and Calais, France. The enter- 
prise would employ the “Zucker” 
aluminum rocket, a German inven- 
tion which was exhibited at the In- 
ternational Air Post Exposition in 
London the first part of May, © 

It is estimated that by means of 
the rocket service letters may be 
shot across the English Channel, a 
distance of 21 miles, in one minute. 

It is reported locally that the in- 
ventor, after demonstrating the prac- 
ticability of such a service, intends 
to approach the British and French 
governments.with a view to arrang- 
ing for a regular rocket mail service, 
a British syndicate being formed for 
the purpose. Under the. proposed 
scheme, Calais would bé the receiv- 
ing and dispatghing point for rt 
continent. 


Valuable Copper Salvaged 
Five hundred tons of copper, valu- 
ed at over $80,000, were recovered 
from the sunken Spectator off Kings- 
dale, Irish Free State, by the Italian 
salvage ship Arpione in the first 14 


slang, and with appropriate verses;days of operation. The Arpione is 
became the Prussian national an-| believed to be directly over the spot 
them, So it is quite erroneous to say| where the Lusitania was sunk by a 
that it “belonged” to Germany, in| torpedo during the World War. The 
the sense that it was borrowed from| Lusitania contains over $5,000,000 in 
gold bullion. 


them. 


ee 


Looseness Of the , Bowels 


During the Summer Months 


It is seldom, during the summer, that most people are 
not troubled with some form of looseness of the bowels. 
Generally it develops into Diarrhaa, Dysentery or 
Summer Complaint, and has a tendeney to weaken the 


system. 
Do not 


al NAWBLIT 


ing the past 88 years. 


Do not cheek the discharges too suddenly. 


t with a new and untried remedy, 


Do not accept a substitute. Be sure and get “Dr. 
Fowler's” when you ask for it. 
Put. ‘up only by The T, Milburn Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ont. 


|and attendants. 


mney dios phants cannot be trained, and there- 


News of the World, London, says: 
“In an interesting article in the Na- 
tional Geographic Magazine it is 
stated that it is not only in this 
country that motor-'buses are cursed, 
but that Arab cameleers are loud’ in 
protest and abuse of the motors, 
which fling choking’ clouds of . dust 
all over the pilgrims. 

“‘Away, thou son ofa dog! By 
Allah! What an invention’ of the 
devil! May your bones break and be 
burnt to cinders by the sun!’ 

“But in another few years the poor 
cameleers may have still,more cause 
to protest, for the road along’ which 
the pilgrims travel will probably be 
the route of the proposed Jeddah- 
Mecca railway, 

“The same authority says that 
much of the elephant lore that is 
widely accepted is fabulous. The 
elephant has a wonderful memory, 
but the beast does not often resent a 
wrong. If elephants avenged every 
beating ‘there would be a very high 
mortality among elephant trainers 


“If the trainer or keeper fears the 
animal, and does not at once subdue 
it with force, then that~ particular 
elephant will continue to intimidate 
him, and he may éventually be killed. 


force, it will then usually submit to 
his authority ever afterwards. 
‘It is often said that African ele- 


fore are seldom seen in circuses or 
zoos. The African elephant is as 
easily trained as the Indian. 

“The great Jumbo was taught to 
carry children on his back in the 
London. Zoo, and was a docile and 
The Belgians at Api, 
one of their stations in the Congo, 
are using trained African elephants 
to plough fields and to pile and carry 
logs and lumber.” 


Alberta Teachers 


Considerable Versatility Is Demanded 
By School Boards 

Some Alberta school boards appar- 
ently demand considerable versatility 
of talents in their school teachers. 
This was revealed at Edmonton as 
the hearing of appeals: for alleged 
wrongful dismissal of teachers con- 
tinued before Judge MacDonald, sit- 
ting as a board of reference. 

A young woman teaching in the 
Willingdon district claimed she had 
been dismissed because she could not 
play the piano. 

Another board, through its chair- 
man, stated that the teacher had 
been dismissed because she was too 
high strung and was continually 
banging the pupils on the heads. 


a 


Almost Everything 

A youth had just driven home from 
college at the close of the term. 

“Did you pass everything?” asked 
his mother anxiously. 

“Everything but two motorcycles, 
They must have had airplane motors 
in them.” 


The ‘lost world” of southern 
Venezuela is being explored by a 
scientific expedition. 


ee _ 


“WHEN THE DAVIS CUP 


the Cup. 


Fight Auto Invasion 


French-Canaiiens Do Not Want 
Cars On Mount Royal 

The only city in the Dominion 
which boasts a mountain in its midst 
is in the middle of a small war about 
the mountain. 

Mount Royal, the rearing landmark 
from which the metropolis of Canada 
derives its name, is the bone of con- 
tention in an argument as to whether 
automobiles shall be allowed for the 
first time in. history to scale its sum- 
mit. 

“The mountain broke into the head- 
lines when Ald. J. Allan Bray ven- 
tured the suggestion motorists be 
permitted to wind their way upward 
to its wooded dells and broad ex- 
panses of green overlooking the mod- 


ae patent Gacy. 5. ss 


the last paper just es as the 


ern city. An immediate storm of| == 


protest broke and thousands of citi- 
zens voiced their determination to 
preserve the primitive natural charm 
of Montreal's namesake for future 
generations to enjoy. 

One of the few fortresses yet re- 
maining against the advance of the 
automobile age, Mount Royal has 
continued to share its picturesque 
quaintness with Bermuda’s motorless 
avenues. To date, only pedestrians, 
bicyclists and the horse-drawn Vic- 
torias which gre heritagés of another 
age in Montreal, are allowed on the 
mountain and the French-Canadians, 
who regard the great rock as part of 
the rich tradition of their land, de- 
clare the honking of the automobile 
horns will never be allowed to break 
its spell. 


Have Suffered Most 


Thousands Of German Professors 
Seek Work In Foreign Countries 
Some 7,500 academic and profes- 

sional refugees from Nazi Germany 

are now attempting to create a new 
existence for themselves in foreign 
countries, the New York Emeregency 

Committee in Aid of Displaced Ger- 

man Scholars reveals. It is declared 

that “of all classes affected by the 

National-Socialist revolution in Ger- 

many, the academic and the profes- 

sionals have suffered the most.” 

A high commission for refugees 
coming from Germany is co-ordinat- 
ing the work in various countries. 
Sixty German scholars have been 
placed in American institutions of 
higher learning. More than 1,300 
German scholars have been displaced, 
of whom 600 to 700 have or will 
shortly emigrate. Between 5,200 to 
5,500 professional people have left 
Germany and 1,500 to 1,600 of the 
7,000 German university students 
forced to quit their studies have 
sought refuge outside Germany. 


British farmers registered as farm 
cheese-makers with the milk mar- 
keting board of Great Britain last 
month numbered 1,284, owning 54,- 
000 cows with an estimated output 
of milk of 22,000,000 gallons per 
annum. 


The total length of the Amazon 
river from the head waters of the 
Ucayali is about 3,300 miles, 


The Alaskan coast, on Disenchant- 
ment Bay, -ose 47 feet during the 
1899 earthquake. 


STAYED IN ENGLAND - 


but take Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild B ism nay 4/1 player, whose victorious match with Frank Shields of the United States 
remedy that has been used by thousands of families 


singles matches as did “Bunny” Austin, England’s second ranking star. Mr. 
Roper Barrett, the non-playing captain of the British team, is seen holding 


Gigantic Cunard White Star Liner 


Some Startling Facts About The New 
Queen Of The Seas 


The name of the new Cunard 
White Star superliner now known as 
No. 534 will be divulged 24 hours be- 
fore the hull slips down the ways at 
Clydebank, Scotland. Queen Mary, 
attended by King George V., will 
launch the new steamer. The ship 
will be at least 1,018 feet long and 
register 73,000 or more gross tons. 
She will cross the Atlantic from Eng- 
land and France in four days. The 
cost of the superliner has been esti- 
mated at $30,000,000. The vessel will 
have 11 decks, one the first class 
promenade being 750 feet long, just 85 
feet less than the entire length of the 
Mauretania. She will be five times 
the length of the original Cunarder, 
the Britannia. The height to the 
masthead will be 250 feet. The rud- 
der will weigh 163 tons. The Aqui- 
tania’s is but half this weight. The 
steel plates range from 8 feet in 
length to 30 feet, and weigh from 
200 to 6,000 pounds. 

There will be 2,000 portholes and 
windows, the panes of glass ranging 
from 12 inches in diameter to large 
cval panes two feet in height. The 
anchor cables, wire hawsers and ropes 
for the ship will be more than four 
miles in length. The anchors, of 
special design, will be the world's 
largest. There will be 60,000 cubic 
feet of refrigerating space. The 
auiomatic steering gear will be the 
largest on any ship. The ship- will 
be driven by single-reduction geared 
turbines supplied with steam from 
high-pressure watertube boilers, There 
will be four screw propellers, each 
driven by an independent set of ma- 
chinery. The driving machinery will 
be placed in two separate engine 
rooms. Four turbo-generators will 
supply power to the auxiliary ma- 
chinery. Three others will supply 
light and power for the hotel auievieee 
in the ship. Oil fuel will be used. The 
propellers will each weigh 35 tons 
and measure 20 feet from tip to tip. 
There will be 257,000 turbine blades, 
varying in length from two to 18 
inches and geared to the thousandth 
part of an inch. The Clyde River 
hus been widened and deepened for 
the launching at a cost of $400,000. 
The new superliner is being built in 
the yards of John Brown & Co. Ltd., 
where the Aquitania was built. 

There will be three funnels. The 
first funnel will be more than 70 feet 
in height, tae other two lower. This 
arrangement will keep the decks and 
ventilators clear of funnel gases. 
The hull of the first Cunarder, the 
Britannia, could be 
any one of the funnels of the new 
tvperliner. The ship will contain 50 
miles of plumbing pipes. The electric 
lighting system is sufficient to service 
a city of more than 150,000 inhabi- 
tants, such as Quebec, Hamilton or 
Ottawa. Steam will be generated in 
27 enormous boilers. The number of 
(tubes in the main and ‘auxiliary con- 
densers will approximate 60,000. The 
electrical ‘wires ‘used “would 
from Halifax to Vancouver and then 
400 miles out into the Pacific ocean. 
The giant’s stacks will be thirty feet 
in diameter, exceeding the Holland 
Tube, between New York and Jersey 
City, by six inches. From the keel 
to the top of the foremost funnel is 
equal to the height of an 18-story 
building. The engines of the 534 will 
generate 200,000 horsepower—enough 
to tow Staten Island across the At- 
lantic. The make up of the ship will 
require 35,000 tons of steel. The 
catering department will contain 
200,000 pieces of crockery. Ten. miles 
of carpets will be used in covering 
the ship's. floors. Tableware, includ- 
ing knives, forks, spoons, etc., will 
total 100,000, The ship's decorations 
will cost $2,500,000. Her steadiness 
will be assured by a> million-dollar 
gyroscopic device weighing 300 tons. 
This device will keep the ship steady 
in the roughest sea. The captain's 
bridge will be 100 feet about the 
water line. The steamer’s ventilators 
will be large enough to swallow a 
subway car. The sun deck will con- 
tain shady garden lounges, palm 
courts and swimming pools, giving a 
tropical aspect to the surroundings 
during all the seasons. The steamer 
will be insured for approximately 
£7,000,000. 


In her 53 flights across the At- 
lantic, the Graf Zeppelin has never 
been more than an hour behind her 
schedule and in many cases she has 
been several hours ahead. 


Tests have shown that actors or 
speakers in a hall should speak 
louder in cold weather, because the 
heavy clothing of the audience ab- 
sorbs more sound, 


An aviator’s hand gauge for meas- 
uring wind velocity, small enough to 
be slipped into a pocket is being used 
by Russian airmen, 


Commonserate Early Flight 


Aeroplanes Kept In Air From Dawn 
To Dusk At Edmonton 

The twenty-fifth anniversary of fly- 
ing in Canada was effectively com- 
memorated at Edmonton recently 
when some 15 members of the Ed- 
monton and Northern Alberta Aero, 
Club kept an aeroplane aloft for 15 
hours, 15 minutes in “a dawn-to- 
dusk” flight. 

In common with other flying clubs 
across the Dominion, the flights were 


carried out, each machine staying in 


the air for shifts of one hour, to be 
replaced by another before the first 
had touched the ground. 

Pilot C. North Sawle, hopping off 
at 5:00 a.m., was the first to com- 
mence the flight, while Pilot Sven 
Jensen was the last to land when he 
brought his machine down at 6:35 
p.m. after a black rain cloud and 
thunder made the sky too black to 
continue. 

Miss Margaret Fane was the only 
woman pilot to take part in the 
commemoration of the flight made by 
“Casey” Baldwin, who hopped off in 
his crudely-made “Silver Hawk” 25 
years ago, August 16, in Nova Scotia. 


London’s Newest Building 


Has Hotel Service And Every Accom- 
modation For Tenants 

“Filatels” is the newly coined name 
to describe a $10,000,000 block of 
flats. which is being completed in 
London. The name is intended-to de- 
scribe flatlets having hotel service. 
There will be 50 flats, accommodat- 
ing 1,200 people. As far as. possible 
every daily want of the tenants— 
food, clothing or service—will be 
available within the building. <A 
shopping expedition of the flat-dwel- 
lers will be merely a trip to the 
ground floor, and there: be res- 
taurants, dining rooms, barber shops 
and beauty parlors. A novel feature 
will be a terrace, 16 feet wide, sur- 
rounding the top floor of the building. 
It resembles a liner promenade deck 
and will be available for sun-bathing 
and exercise. 


Wanted His Razor 


Portland Man Would Shave With 
Blade That Almost Killed Wife 
You can choose your own title for 

this one. Here's the story. 

A little man entered the police sta- 
tion at Portland, Oregon, and asked 
for the razor which his wife used. to 
slash her throat in an unsuccessful 
suicide attempt a few days ago. 

“What do you want with the 
razor?” a police sergeant asked. “I 
want to shave!” was the cool reply. 

It was suggested that he buy a 
new razor. 


Mother—Here is a nice book from 
which I shall read to you. 

Little Girl—What did you bring me 
that book to be read out of from for? 


CAN'T SLIP OR SLIDE 


FALSE TEETH 


Don’t use an: y old kind of 
keep false teeth varelisble 


one w! dentists prescribe 


Nv ERAS A hal i Ills a ita loi et oe — 


Fouts Go so: ee That The 


West Is Rapidly Learning Its 
Lesson Of Diversified Farming 


By SENATOR W. A. BUCHANAN 
In Canadian Business 


Alberta leads Canada in per capita 
production of commercial hog's. Stat- 
ed baldly, Alberta last year market- 
ed 1,032,169 hogs through the recog- 
nized commercial channels. This) 
constituted 32.6 per cent. of the 
commercial hogs prqduced in the Do- 
minion in 1933, With 7.5 per cent. of 
the population; we produced almost 
one-third of this important branch 
of livestock marketings. 


It would be well to have this fact 
about Alberta more generally known | 
throughout Canada, especially to the 
financial, manufacturing and business 
interests generally. For so long the| 
people of the West have been called | 
“wheat miners” and “soil robbers” | 


that there is a strong tendency to 


blame the financial ills of the West | 


on poor farming. We have meer | 
Eastern men, high in the business or 
financial world, say 80 often, “If you 
people out West would grow some- 
thing , besides wheat, a bad crop 
wouldn't cause such a depression,” 
that we had almost come to believe | 
it ourselves, and to wonder if, after! 
all, we were such bad farmers. But | 


the 1931 census furnished us the fig- | 


ures to prove that, farmer for farmer 


will depend entirely upon what can 
be done to break down the tangled 
web of import restrictions which 
have so greatly curtailed world trade. 
The West would like to increase live- 
stock production, and Alberta during 
the depression has shown that it can 
be done. It only remains for markets 
abroad to offer opportunity for a fur- 
ther expansion of this phrase of the 
farming industry. 

The fact is proven to-day that the 
West is “mixing” its agriculture. It 
is diversifying according to the best 
practice, and it is becoming adept at 
it. No longer can we be accused of 


| being a “one crop” country. 


Make Your Own Happiness 


Man Is Largely To Blame If Life 
Is Hard 

Man is the artificer of his own hap- 
piness. Let him beware how he com- 
plains of the disposition of cifcum- 
stances, for it is his own disposition 
of circumstances, for it is his own 
disposition he blames. If this is sour, 
or that rough, or the other steep, let 
him think if it be not his work. If 
his looks curdle all hearts, let him 
not complain of a sour recepticn; if 
he hobble in his gait, let him not 


if not acre for acre, we have nothing grumble at the roughness of the way; 
to be ashamed of \ he is weak in the knees, let him 


The last census figures showed that 


there are more dairy cattle per farm, | 


* more beef cattle per farm, more hogs 
per farm in Alberta than there are 
in the banner province of Ontario. 
Check the Statistical Branch at Ot- 
tewa for the proof. Take the figures 
for commercial hog marketings last 
year as further evidence. 


Alberta in 1933 marketed 1,032,- | 


169 hogs. Ontario, with more than 
three times the population, marketed 
1,300,000 odd. Quebec, second largest 
province in point of population, mar- 
keted a mere 65,000 head. 

We did our share in beef cattle 
production in 1933, too. Alberta 
marketed last year 123,000 head of 
cattle shipping 10,488 of them to 
the Old Country to find a market. 
Our combined -cattle and hog market- 
ings provided approximately 200,000,- 
000 pounds of beef and pork for con- 
sumption. Alberta's’ consumption of 
these two meat commodities is in the 
neighborhood of 93,750,000 pounds 
annually. Our surplus, for which we 
had to find a market outside the 
province, was more than our home 
consumption, 

At a time when Canadians are 
being told that they must curtail 
their production of wheat, which is 
the West's financial mainstay, this 
matter of I'vestock production and 
livestock markets takes on a double 
significance. If we take acres out 
of wheat we must either give them 
over to coarse grains and pasture for 
livestock, or let them go back to 

weeds. And we have millions of acres 
of virgin land available for cattle and 
sheep grazing upon which we can ex- 
pand the livestock industry without 
taking an acre out of wheat. Al- 
berta has practically tripled hog pro- 
duction between 1921 and 1933 while, 
at the same time, we have practically 
doubled our wheat acreage. It is 
being forecast by livestock officials 
that we shall soon be leading Can- 
ada in hog production, it being point- 
ed out that Ontario has come close 
to the saturation point in the pro- 
duction of pork. The incidence ‘of 
higher pork prices during the past 
year due to the increasing market | 
for Canadian bacon in the British 
Isles is just the stimulus needed to 


encourage hog growers to expand , age 


their holdings. 

What has happened in hog produc- | 
tion is happening in production of 
dairy products in Alberta. In 1933) 
the province set a new all-time record 
in creamery butter production, in the 
neighborhood of 25,000,000 pounds, 
and the value of commercial dairy 
products approximated $12,750,000 as, 
compared with a total valuation of | 
$52,000, for field crops—another 
evidence t, so far at least as Al- 
berta is concerned we are rapidly 
learning the lesson of diversified | 
farming. , 

Dairying and hog production, 
therefore, are rapidly taking up the 


}not call the hill steep. This was the 
pith of the inscription on the wall of 
the Swedish inn: “You will find at 
‘Trochate excellent bread; meat, and 
wine provided you bring them with 
you.”"—-Henry D. Thoreau. 


Winnipeg Newspaper Union 


| 


PLENTY OF FREEDOM FOR WEE 
MAIDS 


Characterizes French model for 
pre-kindergarten and _ kindergarten 


This adorable little frock of sprig- 
ged dimity shown today, finished its 
sleeves and waistline with lace bead- 
ing and grosgrain ribbon. The edge 
of the sleeve has a val lace frill, to 


‘match the crisp white organdie col- 


lar edge. 

The full-gathered skirt allows 
plenty of freedom for romping about. 

It’s also pretty as can be and prac- 
tical too, carried out in pale blue and 
white tiny checked gingham, pink 
and white candy striped percale, red 
and white plaided lawn, etc. 

Btyle No, 523 is designed for sizes 
2,4 and 6 years, Size 4 requires 1% 
yards of 35-inch material with % 
yard of 35-inch contrasting, 2 yards 
of lace, 1% yards of ribbon. 

Price of pattern 20 cents in stamps 


‘or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap 


slack im our agricultural fabric, But, | coin carefully. 


as is the case with wheat, we in the 
West are producing much more than 
we consume, and the importance “4 
markets abroad grows more acute. 
Whether in these days of extreme 
nationalism throughout the world, 
the West can go on expanding live-) 
stock and dairy production while ' 
holding its place as the world’s larg- 
est producer of fine milling er 


W. N. U. 2061 


How To Order Patterns 


Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 
175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg 


Pattern No........... Size. .......4.. 
Name ....++++++ suaeestss seeecesens 
TOWR .csccecsegss eereee eeeeeercoes 


THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA 


Canard White Star Saperiiner ieee | 


Massive Propelling Machinery Being 
Installed Most Powerful Ever 
Constructed 
Rapid progress is being made in 
the construction of the propelling, 
machinery for the Cunard White Star | 
supefliner No. 534, which will be! 
launched at Clydebank at an early | 
date by Her Majesty Queen Mary, 
attended by’ the King. When com- 
pleted, this installation will be the | 
most powerful ever constructed for, 
any liner and the spaces reserved in 
the ship for turbines, boilers and 
auxiliary machinery will equal the 
total length of some large Atlantic 
liners. The combined length of the 
four sets of engines, one of which 
has’ been completed, is more than 200 
feet, while no fewer than five separ- 
ate rooms will be needed for the 27 
enormous boilers, nearly all of which 
are now ready. The main steam pip- 
ing leading from these boilers to the 
engines would cover a straight dis- 
tance of 2,500 feet. The number of 
tubes in the massive main and auxili- 
ary condensers will approximate 60,- 

000. 

The installation of this propelling 
machinery calls for the attention of 
highly specialized mechanics, Every 
one of the 257,000 turbine blades, 
varying in length from two to sixteen 
inches, requires expert testing by 
hand. The gear wheels, of which 
there are four, received three months 
of delicate cutting and are lined up 
to a thousandth of an inch. 

Holes in the stern of the hull are 
being completed and will soon be 
ready to receive the propeller shafts. 
This installation consists of a series 
of forged steel shafts approximately 
33 feet long. When joined together 
each complete line of shafting will 
extend a distance of nearly 230 feet, 
being actually nearly 20 feet greater 
in length than the hull of the first 
Cunard liner, “Britannia”. 

The greater part of the propelling 
machinery will be fitted into the ship 
after the launching. Owing to the 
size and weight of the various parts 
it will be necessary for them to be 
handled in sections. 

The four propellers of the No. 534 
are the largest ever cast for any ship. 
Each one will weigh 35 tons and have 
a spread of nearly 20 feet from tip 
to tip. The propellers are made of 
manganese bronze because of its 
great strength, non-corrosive and 
non-erosive qualities. They were 
cast in the foundry which supplied 
the propeliers for the British Battle- 
ship Hood. , e 


Farmer Is Greatest Gambler 

Who is the world’s biggest gam- 
bier? We'd say the farmer. He 
gambles with the weather, with the 
soil, with grasshoppers, with army 
worms, with grubs and a score of 
other plagues—a desperate chance. 
If he wins, as he does occasionally, 
he comes off with a big stake; if he 
loses, which he does frequently, he 
has a chance to try again. Happily | 


he is a good loser, or the world would 
starve. 


Some Unusual Operations 
Nova Scotia Doctors Have Had 
Success With Crude Instruments 

That story from Chicago about the 
doctor who saved a child from 
strangulation with a kitchen knife 
and a piece of rubber hose, didn’t stir 
up much excitement among Halifax 
medical men. 

They recalled that one of their 
number had saved a life in just a 
slightly different way. Without time 
to get his instruments, he had reach- 
ed a home where a ‘child lay near 
death through strangulation. 

In the house he found an ordinary 
jack-knife. While this was being 
sterilized by boiling he took the 
father’s clay pipe and snapped off the 
stem close to the bowl. Then he made 
an incision with the jackknife,’ and 
inserted the pipe stem into the lad’s 
windpipe. Life-giving air flowed into 
his lungs instantly, and subsequent- 
ly he made a full recovery. 

Just as resourceful was another 
Halifax doctor who arrived at the 
bedside of a choking woman with 
only a scalpel. He picked a hairpin 
from her head; then he cut a slit in 
her throat and inserted the hairpin. 

So that the pin would keep 4& 
breathing space open, the doctor tied 
a length of string to each prong, 
then brought the strings around her 
neck and knotted them firmly at the 
rear, The makeshift enabled the 
stricken woman to breathe comfort- 
ably until she could be taken to hos- 
pital for an operation. She too re- 
covered, and to-day is alive and well. 


Strange Weather Prophet 


Onion Used By Man In Making 
Accurate Forecast 

Marshfield’s famous “onion” weather 
prophet, Edward Benesch, is dead. He 
was 69. 

Each New Year’s eve Benesch 
would go alone to the basement of 
his cobbler shop in Marshfield, Wis- 
consin, and by the light of a solitary 
candle would cut apart onions. until 
he found one suitable for his queer 
augury. 

Studying 12 circles of the onion, 
Benesch would essay to foretell the 
weather for the coming year during 
the last half hour of the old year and 
the first half hour of the new. 

Accuracy of his predictions won for 
him a nation-wide reputation. 


Girls Take Up Dentistry 


Profession Is Attractive ‘To For- 
mosans States Canadian Principal 
Formosan girls are attracted more 

to dentistry than to the other pro- 

fessions, and are making good at it, 

in the opinion of Miss Dorothy C. 

Douglas, principal of a school of 

dentistry in Formosa, who passed 

through Winnipeg for a furlough at 
her home in Lucknow, Ontario. 

“One girl graduate of our school is 
an exceptionally good dentist,” Miss 
Douglas added. “She offers a reduc- 
tion in her set prices to all patients 
who are Christians.” 3 


The stars are growing more favorable for exile royalty in Hurope, ob- 
servers believe, At Doorn, Holland, the 75-year-old wood-chopping former 
Kaiser Wilhelm II. casts anxious eyes at his former German domain, where 
the populace has endured political insecurity for most of the post-war years. 
Not much farther away than a “Big Bertha’ shell could travel, waits hand- 

Prince Otto at a villa near Brussels, Belgium, hoping to hear trumpets 
sound for the restoration of the ancient house of Hapsburg to its throne 


in Austria and Hungary. 


Western Farmers Favor Plan 
For Planting Tree Belt Across 
The Dried Out Areas of Prairies 


The World Advances 


Science Making Living Conditions 
. More Pleasant 

While nations may haggle over 
so-called bargains in nationalism 
and the armament manufacturers 
watch gleefully the reports of in- 
creasing supplies of war materials, 
science goes forward in its efforts 
to-make the business of everyday | 
living more easy and more romantic, 

The other day a gentleman in Jas- 
per, Alberta, talked to a friend on 
the S.S. Empress of Britain on the 
high seas. The conversation was 
sent by wires to New York, thence} 
to London, and then transmitted 
through the radio channel back to 
the vessel. This hook-up was made 
in fast time, and the three minutes’ 
talk was quite clearly heard. 

Just recently, Prerhier Bennett, 
sitting in Ottawa, spoke briefly in 
dedication of a giant electric sign 
placed on the Grand Building oppo- 
site Canada House in London, Eng- 
land; and his words were written in 
a running line of illuminated electric 
letters at the foot of this same sign. 
A moment later the Premier pressed 
a lever and the sign itself sprang to 
light. 

These two incidents are typical of 
the marvel of the modern world, a 
marvel that has been achieved 
through the activity of science, Space 
has been ni®:rowed and time shorten- 
ed. Nor has any of the glamor or 
excitement or the salt of satisfaction 


been taken out of living thereby. 

The only fly in this lovely amber 
is, will mankind have sense enough 
to use these instruments, so poten- 
tial of constructive well-being or so 
potential of destructive chaos, to 
their own happiness and everlasting 
glory? ‘In the present condition of 
international political and economic 
affairs; this is a question that should 
cause much sincere heart-searching. 
—Winnipeg Free Press. 


Apples In Egypt 


Egypt Fourth Largest Consumer of 
Canadian Fruit 

It appears that. centuries were to 
pass and the pyramids crumble and 
decay before Egypt, the ever-old and 
ever-young, knew the delectability of 
the Canadian apple. Indeed, until two 
or three years ago Egypt was en- 
tirely neglected by Canadian apple 
growers, but as soon as the Canadian 
apple became known Egypt it became 
the fourth largest consumer of that 
popular Canadian fruit. The quality 
of the Canadian apple is supreme, 
and, had an ancient Pharaoh of All 
the Egypts been able to introduce it 
into his realms, that masterstroke 
would have been a feather in his 
duplicated hat. 

The value of the exports of Cana- 
dian apples to Egypt in 1938 touch- 
ed the high level of $135,177. This 
may occasion no surprise to Cana- 
dians generally who know their 
apples, but it is all the more to Can- 
ada's credit because as a cold matter 
of business emphasized by the Cana- 
dian Trade Commissioner in Egypt 
who states in a recent report, “It ‘is 
difficult to find a reason for the in- 
crease during the last season, as the 
slight improvement in economic. con- 
ditions in Egypt were not such as to 
warrant such an increase in apple 
imports.” But quality always tells. 


Methods Of Home Canning 


The One-Period Cold Pack Meets 
With Favor 

One of the principal methods of 
home canning is the one-period cold- 
pack. It is so called because the un- 
cooked or partly cooked food is pack- 
ed into a jar and covered with some 
liquid, such as syrup or water, and 
both jar and its contents are heated 
simultaneously by boiling water or 
steam. This method may be used for 
all fruits and vegetables, and is 
recommended for home use by the 
Dominion Department of Agriculture 
in a bulletin dealing with the various 
methods of preserving fruits and 
vegetables in the home, The one- 
period cold-pack is a very simple pro- 
cess and completely sterilizes, inas- 
much as the product is placed in 
sterilized jars which are closed dyr- 
ing the cooking process. In this way 
the organisms in the pack are killed 
and access by any bacteria from the 
air and other outside sources is ren- 
dered impossible. The appearance of 
the finished product is superior, as 
each berry or slice remains intact. 
There is no crushing, the flavour, 
colour, and texture retaining their 
natural condition. 


With the announcement of the 
start of the tree belt in the United 
States comes a suggestion from 
many farmers in the dried out areas 
of Saskatchewan that federal author- 
ities should také under consideration 
& tree belting plan for the bald part 
of the prairies. 

In this corection Alan Beaven, 
of the Canadian Forestry Association 
tree planting car, who has been 


| working in southern Manitoba, and 


is now going to northwest Saskat- 
chewan and Alberta has discussed 
the proposal of tree belt with hun- 
dreds of farmers both in Manitoba 
and Saskatchewan and he reports 
that the project is one the farmers 
want, it is feasible it can be done as 
@ relie? iseasure and as to details of 
inauguration and supervision, these 
should be left to federal authorities. 

There are seven excellent reasons 
cited by Mr. Beaven for the construc- 
tion of a tree belt in dried-out Sas- 
katchewan. 

These seven reasons are: 

Cooling effect on atmosphere. 

Breaking up of damaging winds. 

Conservation of moisture. 

Formation of surface moisture. 

Breeding grounds and homes for 
insectivorous birds. 

Improved conditions for diversifica- 
tion in farming. 

Improved living conditions for the 
people. 

Basis for improving conditions, ac- 
cording to Mr. Beaven, lies in the 
fact that any program should aim 
not so“much to try to change cli- 
matic conditions, but to so alter the 
entire agricultural system to take the 
greatest advantage of moisture se- 
cured, and to break up the disastrous 
wind sweeps. 

Taking periods of time, such as 10 
years, moisture and precipitation 
records and velocity of winds have 
not changed greatly, but intensive 
agricultural development has chang- 
ed their effect on the prairies. 

Farming operations, he says, have 
gone on, until much of the crust has 
been done away with, the sod turned 
to the sun, and then the sweeping 
winds have started soil drifting, or 
in other words the development of 
agriculture since prairie settlement 
has turned the prairies at this time 
into a potential desert. 

As to the cost of the projet, Mr. 
Beaven points out that it would not 
cost more than outlays for relief on 
the prairie to date, and that 90 per 
cent. of the outlay would go direct 
to the farmer for labor. 


Mr, Beaven has observed that cer- © 


tain protected areas around farm 
homes in dried-out Saskatchewan 
during the past five years have pro- 
duced more of necessities and susten- 
ance, then all the rest of the farm. 
Regina Leader-Post. 


To Winter Livestock 


Plans Discussed At Calgary To Care 
For Cattle During Winter 

Plans for the feeding of Western 
cattle during the winter were dis- 
cussed at Calgary by a committee 
appointed by the Dominion Agricul- 
tural Credit Company and repre- 
sentatives of the Central Alberta 
Feeders’ Association, the Olds and 
Southern Alberta Co-operative Asso- 
ciation. 

Two plans were discussed. One 
plan proposed feeder cattle be pur- 
chased outright from the rancher, 
the credit company advancing the 
major portion of the money and the 
farmer the rest. The other called for 
the advance of 50 per cent. of the 
steer value by the credit company to 
assist the farmer in carrying over 
his stock until next spring. 


A Costly Butterfly 

A wealthy Scotsman, William Mac- 
Queen, is leading a scientific expedi- 
tion to the wilds of the Aysen ter- 
ritory, skirting Chilean Patagonia. 
He is striving to get there before an 
American expedition now hurrying 
to the same district. Mr, MacQueen 


is spending £5,000 on the race be- | 


cause he wants to be the first to dis- 
cover a new species of butterfly re- 
ported in the Aysen region. 


The Japanese Idea 

The front page of most Japanese 
morning newspapers is given over to 
book advertisements. The Japanese 
figure that, as the front page is likely 
to be soiled, they print only adver- 
tisements there. 

Little Betty, watching the farm 
hands spreading out a stack of hay 
to dry, could contain her curiosity no 
longer, so she politely asked: 

“Ie it a needle you're looking for?" 


f 


Sey 


Pe 


cow 


a Sey 


’ 


The Redcliff Review 


‘HURSDAY SEPT. 138th, 1984 


under arrangements now 


*  ewiplete between the f:deral 


ana prairie governments, both 

«1 pay bali the cost of surplus 

animals moved from the drouth 
u strictg in Saskatchewan. Man- 
itvba and Alberta to. vacking 
piants in various parts of Can- 
ada. 
- The animals will be processed 
into boneless meat and tankage 
a'' to be sold outride of Canada 
the two governments’ paying 
half the export costs Hon. Rob- 
ert Weir. Federal minister of 
agriculture, announced in Reg- 
ina Monday. 

In the movement of the cattle 
to the precessing plants and aft- 
e: the operation the govern- 
ment hag secured a specia: rate 
from the railways, half the us- 
val scale. The pakers in turn 
have consented to a low process- 
ing.rate from $2.00 to $2.50 
un animal. 

The farmer owners of ‘hie cat- 
tie will get the entire proceeds 
of the sale of the processel 
avimals, minus the Decal 
cast, 


JUST FOR FUN 


Oh, for the goad oid day; 
wken you could kiss a girl and 
trate nothing but girl. 

ees 

More men of standin, wou!d 
aun for office if politics wanted 
rien who stood anywhe-e, 

eee 

Times are so much better that 
®8cme householders have move! 
the wolf out to the vazant half 
cf the garage. 

s ¢@ 

Wife: “There’s one thing 
aout my mother: sh:’s 9ut- 
sroken.” 

Husband: “Not by any ore T 
know.” 

Husbanfi: “Your cheque nas 
been returned from tue bank 
tarked ‘no funds’.” 

Wife: “That’s queer. I saw 
in the paper only yesterday 
that the bank had a surplus of 
over $8,000, 000.” 

eae 
J'ever shoot any rabbits ?” 
“Naw, I aint got a canoe.” 


Redcliff Reminiscences 


Taken From the Review File of 
Septemger 17th, 1915 


Picnicers to Elkwater Lale 
luet Sunday were force’ to re- 
ain there over night wwing + 
the heavy snow storn. which 
Trade the roads impass:‘le. 

* @ 6 

Canada has this yrar the 

largest crop in its histocy. 


Redcliff Cigar Factory is roe 
turning out a very fine cigar 
which will sell for Be. 


The Brick & Coal plant has 


. Frospects for running al' wi’ter 


*ees 
Fred Woolfrice has a ;«.mpki’ 
‘nised in Redcliff, weighing 
50 pounds, 


R. Landis has purcha-e d tre 
fre residence on Fifth stre+t 
yreviously owned and -ccupkd 
Vy Leonard McLean. 


Office and Residence in 


i 


PREMIER R. B. BENNETT 
v ho is now in Geneva, has been 
elected Chairman of the Second 
C mmission of the League of 


Specials For 
The Week End 


Prime Rib Roast per Ib. 15+ 
Pot Roast. Beef per Ib. 10 
Shoulder of Lamb Ib... 12¢ 


Nations. 


| Lang Bros. | Ltd. 


Bolling Best per tb... Te INSURANCE 
We Appreciate Your Fire Accident 
Patronage Life Sickness 

| 651 2nd.St Medicine Hat 


Telephone 3554 


SOOSCSSSSSOSSESSSSSOSSSESESSESSESETHHSSHSSSSSOSSSESESE 


ANOTHER 
TRAVEL 


BARGAIN ||: 
TO 


EASTERN 
CANADA 


VEGETABLES 
FOR SALE 


An Unlimited Supply of 
Green Corn, Cabbage, Cu- 
cumbers, Potatoes, Carrots 

Beets Turnips, Onions, 


Peppers, Cauliflower, 
Parsnips, Celery 


Winter Cabbage 


WOO HONG 


Store Opposite Post Office 


IL © BOs 00000006 OS SOOO OOOO ESOSESHOEDSEEODAASFABEAF OPO 


SSSCHSSSSSSS HSS HSESSOHSSHSSSSSSSSSOSSSSSSSSSSHSSSES 
SSCOSSSSSS“SHSSSHSSSSSHUTFSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESCSESESOs 


\ 
Seeeeeecseseseseseseseoce 


GET YOUR CAR ff 
AND TRUCK REPAIRS $}f 


When in the city for the Big i 
Celebration Sept. 27, 28, 29 i 


We have a complete stock of all Accessories | 
AT REASONABLE PRICES | 


Your car will be attended to here by Competent 
Workmen. Best Quality Gas and Oils 


BENY’S GARAGE, Medicine Hat 


You should keep the Last Three Days of 
This Month in Mind for 


The Big Celebration 


We levity gen th'ceme in snlileck evel ania 


Harness and Saddles 
Boots and Shoes 


Hornoss Mode in Our Own ¢23.00 and up 


WE REPAIR ANYTHING MADE FROM LEATHER 


WORK SHIRTS, OVERALLS, 
RIDING PANTS AND SPORTING GOODS 


McKENZIE & MORRISON 


6o8 THIRD ST. MEDIOINE HAT 


{ 


SSE 


LL <_« 
Issuer of .Marriage Licenses 


Rent collections attended to 
Office at Residence 2nd St. 


We are Prepared to Dry 


KEETLEY JOHNSON 
For Accident, Fire and 
Sickness Insurance 
Ocean Passenegr Service 
7th Street, Redcliff 


Alberta Grain Growers 
READ THIS MESSAGE! 


It is of vital importanes that a strong en-operative 
Elevavor System should flouris: ir, Atberta. Jt fs desir 
able that such an elevator system should ‘be ‘under thé 
control of Alberta grain growers—. meh who are actu: 
ally following the occupation of farming. 


WM, HENDERSON ’ 


FIRE INSURANCE | : 


nd 


The Alberta Pool Elevator system ig the only or‘ 
ganization in Alberta that meets these requirements, 


Dry Cleaning 
Done in Town 


Get Your Old Clothes 
Cleaned Up For Spring 


All country elevators of the Pool system aré opel 
ated under public license and as such are ‘na pont ne 
to handle the grain of any grower. 


Alberta Pool Elevators arg on a sound finaacial 
basis; are efficiently managed and can give unexcelled 
service to the grain growers of this province. Albovta 

vi agents are carefully selected and have strict 
instructions to give fair treatment, including proper 


Clean and Press weights and correct grades, to all patrons. 


SUITS, OVERCOATS 
and PLAIN DRESSES 
For $1.25 


Goods Called For and;Delivered 
GIVE US A TRIAL 


LEUNG BROS. 


Fourh St Next Town Hall 


220A OAS4H9O42E6S6888E88 


Alberta Pool Elevators operate on the co-operative 
principle of “Each for all and all for each” —a Hrinc'ple 
which will tend to bring a measure of economic and 
social justice, peace and prosperity thrcughout the 
world, 


Alberta Pool Elevators 


THE NEW 
CLUB CAFE 


2nd St. S. E. Medicine Hat 


When in Need of 


Counter Check Books 


Leave Your Order At 


The Redcliff Review 


When in the city for busi- 
ness or pleasure, make our 
Cafe your Headquarters 
MEALS AND LUNCHES 

AT ALL HOURS 
and at Reasonable Prices 


SOSOSSSOSSSLSOSSSSESOEOOEESEEED 


Take advantage of our 
Service and Accommodation 


THE NEW CLUB CAFE 


Get Your Job Printing 
-At The Review Office 


No Job Too Big nor None Too Sauk 


for us to handle 


ENVELOPES 
LETTERHEADS 
NOTE HEADS 
BILLHEADS 
3LATEMENTS 
CIRCULARS 
BOOKLETS 
PRIZE LISTS 
TICKETS 
VISITING CARDS 
BUSINESS CARDS 
PROGRAMS 
RULED FORMS 
BALANCE SHEETS 
DODGERS 
POSTERS 
AUCTION BILLS 


Let the People Know what you have to sell, by 
ADVERTISING IN THE REVIEW 


Leave Vou 
Orders Here 
For The 


Following | 


Satisfaction 
Guaranteed 

and Prices 
Reasonable 


FREPROROIOOOOOOODOOOOIS 


~ 


~ 


~s 


Farmers Must Prosper 


Trade Will Revive When They Get 
Fair Price For Products 

‘Beonomistsa realize that unless the 
primary producers get reasonable re- 
turns for their labors and invest- 
ments prosperity will linge. The 
farmer, for example, has nothing to 
do with, fixing the prices for his own 
products, When he goes into a 
store he is told that a suit of clothes 
cost so much or a pound of bacén‘so 
many cents; but when he tries to gell 
any of his own produce, he discovers 
that he must take what he is offcted 

" for the wool for the suit/or the hogs 
from which the bacon is takén, 

The Niagara Falls Review the 
other day pointed to the case of an 
Ontario farmer who sent seven hun- 
@red pounds of hogs to market and 
got enough out of the transaction to 
purchase one pound of bacon. Ob- 
viously the farmer cannot continue 
doing that sort of thing. All of 
which is brought to mind by a para- 
graph in the afinual report of the 
Ontario Vegetable Growers’ Associa- 
tion. It is pointed out that: “Seventy 
per cent. of the world’s population is 
agricultural. Seventy per cent. of 
the customers of the world's industry 
are agriculturists. Broadly speak- 
ing, ail the farmers of the world are 
in the same box. Whence will come 
this much-announced trade revival 
from an impoverished agriculture? 
Apparently, the thirty per cent. of 
the world's population that is indus- 
trial—and incidentally a large per- 
centage of those are at present un- 
employed and on-relief, are going to 
have a real revival amongst them- 
selves? We extend our best wishes, 
but are of the opinion that the party 
will only be of short duration. The 
revival will come when seventy per 
cent., the agricultural part of the 
world, cease producing at a loss and 
have a surplus with which to buy 
from the industrial thirty per cent.” 

Surely this is not an illogical posi- 
tion.—Brockville Recorder and Times. 


Harvested d Apples Alive 


When an apple is picked, it is a 


living thing and there are constant | up. 


and gradual changes going on 
throughout its storage life. The 
speed of these changes is largely 
governed by the temperature and 


sugars first, sometimes to a reduc- 
ing sugar and sometimes part of it 
‘is changed to sucrose or Cane sugar. 
Then thé sucrose is gradually used 
up and turned into reducing sugars 
and acid. When the starch and 
sucrose have practically disappeared 
the apple begins to lose its quality 
and becomes what is ordinarily call- 
ed “over-ripe’. The length of time 
taken by those changes varies in d'f- 
ferent “varieties. It is a varietal 
characteristic, not solely related to 
the actual amount of these materials 
in the ffuit, for there are several fall 
varieties which have higher sugar 
content than many winter varieties. 
However, it has been found in the 
laboratories of the Dominion Depart- 
ment of Agriculture that, all other 
things being equal, the fruit with the 
highest total sugar content has the 
best keeping quality of the samples 
of that variety. 


Pleasant People 


Possess A Magic Which Makes Them 
Always Welcome 

Pleasant people make a dull day 
cheerful; they have somewhat of the 
same effect in a room as an open fire 
or a bouquet of flowers; they make 
us feel for the time as if everybody 
was pleasant because they are. We 
cannot always explain why they are 
so pleasant. They may not be beau- 
tiful—they are often plain; they are 
not always the wittiest; but they 
possess a magic superior to all these 
which dwarfs the wit and cleverness 
of others, and makes these of small 
value beside their own attractiveness. 


In Right Direction 

“I am a soldier of the Lord,’ said 
the Salvation Army officer to an 
old Highland soldier, who asked him 
what his regiment was. 


“I go to Inverness to,fight the 


Devil; thence to Aberdeen)\to fight 
him again, and then down to Dundee, 
Edinburgh and Newcastle.” 

The soldier struggled to his feet 
and gave the officer a resounding 
clap on the back, “That's richt, ma 
man,” he said. “Keep on heading the 
blighter South.” 


Client: “I am deeply indebted to 
you, Mr. Attorney; what would. I 
have done without you?” 

,, Lawyer; “About five years.” 


1 


W. N. U. 2061 


RT 


Just Taking A Chance 


Story Of Man Trying To Suit Clothes 
: To Weather 

You wake up shivering slightly, 
and your wife remarks that it seems 
pretty cold for August. You feel 
very Decembery standing in the bath- 
room shaving, and at once the prob- 
lem of what clothes to wear comes 


This is your day for the linen suit, 
but you're a little afraid to put it 
on; it might be cold. You decide that 
tweeds would be just about. right, 
and you start putting on tweeds. — 


before noon, and you deliquesced all 
day. You stick your head out the 
window to see how cold it really is, 
and a pretty girl across the street 
looks up and smiles. You recollect 
that your shirt is not buttoned, and 
draw back hastily. 

Your wife calls out that the 
weather forecaster predicts fair and 
continued cool. You think that may- 
be the flannel suit would be cool 
enough for a hot day, yet warm 
enough if it stays cool. You look 
for your flannel suit, and find it is 
at the cleaner’s. ‘ 

You mutter oh, what's the use. 
You decide that the weather fore- 
caster is wrong most of the time, 
anyway, and you put on’ your linens. 
Your wife remarks that linen is too 
cool for to-day, and that settles it. 
You keep them on. 

It stays cool all day, until 5 o'clock, 
when it becomes downright cold. You 
are annoyed because people insist on 
staring at you in your linens on the 
way home, You almost run the last 
few sidewalks, and duck quickly in- 
to the house.-New York Post. 


invents Lighted Blackjack 


Efficient London “Bobbie” 
Arranges For Spare Bulb 
Ever efficient, London’s “bobbies” 
are soon to make it possible for a 
person to be scientifically clubbed 
over the head with a truncheon at 
night, this feat to be accompanied by 
a newly-invented combination black- 
jack and flashlight. 
It was conceived in the inventive 
brain of Sergeant Elliot Tucker of 


Also 


| the metropolitan police force, and the 


proud inventor demonstrated his 
brain-child before officials at the 
Savoy hotel, z 

A spare light bulb is carried in the 
handle of the instrument “in case,” 
the sergeant explains, “the other one 
should be broken banging an unusu- 
ally hard skull.” 


“I want some hot poppered butt 
corn--I mean cot buttered ‘bop corn 
—that is, corn hottered pop but, or 
rather hop cuttered pop born. I 
mean, oh, well, gimme some pea- 
nuts.” 


The largest merry-go-round fac- 
tory in the world is located at Coney 
Island, New York. Its products are 
shipped to Japan, South Africa, Aus- 
tria and elsewhere. 


y fi 


— ean 


EUROPE SPENDS HEAVILY IN BUILDING AIR FORCES 


oes 
An English combat plane 


Europe has turned to the air with feverish interest and each nation is pouring out millions’to build up power- 
ful military aviation fleets. Since the rise to power of General Hermann Goering, Germany’s minister of air, the 
Nazi regime has quadrupled its expenditures for “civil” aircraft, and many schools for flying have been estab- 
lished, England has appropriated almost $100,000,000 to double her airplane squadrons, and acting Prime Minister 
Stanley Baldwin states the new boundary of England, because of the air, is now the Rhine. 
sia and the smaller countries also possess powerful aviation corps, and each is planning even stronger forces in 
the air to keep its defensive power on a par with neighboring nations. 


France, Italy, Rus- 


Beneficial To Eyes 


Normal Tears Are Often Better 
Than Any Medicine 

Normal tears are “hundreds of 
times” more effective in protecting 
the eye than are solutions of drugs. 
This statement is made by a leading 
American Ophthalmologist, Dr. W. L. 
Benedict. ‘Tears,” Dr. Benedict says 
“are supplied in amounts that are 
properly regulated, and they counter- 
act the effect of most air-borne bac- 
teria.” Because the general public 
has learned that many eye lotions are 
put up im a solution of boric acid, the 


better-informed immediately turn to 


it as the one safe substance that can 
be used.for any disorder of the eye. 
“The properties of boric acid 
are infinitesmal,” Dr, Benedict de- 
clares. “It is used chiefly by physi- 
cians as a vehicle to carry small 
dilutions of more potent drugs; be- 
cause it retards the growth of fungi 
or contaminating bacteria, it forms 
@ convenient way to dispense medi- 
cines for the eye. The faith our 
grandmothers had in goat's milk, 
snake oil, or tobacco juice has been 
largely dissipated. But the price the 
public had to pay for its experience 
has been the loss of sight for thous- 
ands of people.” 


Invents Metal Mirror 


Will Solve One Of Television's Prob- 
lems Is Claim 

A tiny metal mirror, mounted on a 
slender rod and vibrated at scanning 
speeds has been presented by William 
H. Priess, New York radio engineer, 
as what he considers the solution of 
one of television's major problems. 

With this device and its light 
source, Priess says, he will be able to 
reproduce television images on a 
screen 2% feet square, approximately 
equal to the quality of home moving 
pictures. 


—— 


First Mention Of Spoons 


Reference To One Of Oldest Utensils 
4 Found In Bible 
Of all the articles and utensils 
that are used in the modern house- 
hold there is none which can be 
traced to earlier beginnings than the 
spoon, says a writer in the Washing- 
ton Post. Besides having a fascinat- 
history, a spoon is one of the 
loveliest most graceful pieces used 
on the table. Going back to its origin, 
the first reference made to spoons is 
in the Bible, where Moses was com- 
manded to make gold spoons for the 
tabernacle, t 
spoons were made of silver, horn or 
wood. Even though England is so 


closely associated with lovely silver 


designs, it was on the continent that 
silver spoons were used first . 
probably Italy. After the silver 
spoons became popular in England, 
about the time of the Tudor and 
Stuart reigns it became fashionable 
to give apostle spoons as christening 
gifts. They were called apostle 
spoons because of the figure of an 
apostle at the end of the spoon. A 
eomplete set of these was very valu- 
able and were owned only by the 
wealthy families. This gave rise to 
the saying of “being born with a sil- 
ver spoon in his mouth.” 


A Snappy Orchestra 


Two Members Over Seventy And 
Two Past Eighty 
Hiram Bailey and his snappy orch- 
estra have summer visitors at Green- 
field, New. Hampshire, guessing. As 
strangers listen outside the dance 
hall to the lively strains from within 
their mental picture of the musicians 
is anything but accurate. 
Hiram is 84. Others in the band 
are Fred Warren, 78; Will Byrant, 
80; and John Draper, a 70-year-old 
youngster just coming along. 


During medieval times 


. 


One Of The Best Of Cocktails 


Tomato Cocktall Is Enjoying A Wide 
\ Popularity 
The, return once more of the 
tomato season is a reminder that 
during the past year wherever Cana+ 
dian products were shown at the 
various-exhibitions around the Bri- 
tish Isles, it was the Canadian tomato 
cocktail that took ‘the country by 
storm. Not only is the tomato an 
outstanding thirst quencher but re- 
search has shown that the tomato 
assists in the assimilation of heavier 
foods and increases resistancé to 
colds, pneumonia, and such like ills. 
The tomato is particularly helpful 
in promoting ‘the normal gfowth of} 
children. However that may be, the} 
Canadian tomato cocktail sprang into | 
popularity of its own volition, both} 
on account of the simplicity of its 
manufacture and its enticing flavour. 
The tomato cocktail is made from 
tomato juice with small amounts of 
mild spices added according to taste, 
such as cloves, allspice, cinnamon, 
and red pepper supplemented by the 
required amounts of salt and sugar. 
To make the juice, the tomatoes 
should be slightly pulped with a 
potato masher, placed in a covered 
kettle, and allowed to heat on the 
stove until almost boiling. After the 
pulp has reached the boiling point, it 
is ready to be passed through a sieve 
to remove the skin and seeds. It is 
imperative that no time be lost in 
the operation because exposure to air 
will cause a loss of the nutritive 
value of the juice. The juice after 
straining should be returned to the 
kettle and be brought again just to 
boiling point when it is filled into 
bottles or sealers which have been 
kept hot. The sealed bottles are then 
placed in boiling water for a few 
minutes—2 minutes for small bottles 
and 4 or 5 minutes for larger ones. 
Tomatoes put up by the cold pack. 
method are ideal for making juice 
during the winter months. For this 
purpose, place the tomatoes solidly in 
clean cans or -wide-mouthed jars, add 
2 level teaspoons of salt, partly seal 
the containers and immerse in warm 
water. Bring the water to boiling 
point and keep it so for 25 minutes. 
Remove the containers from the 
water, completely seal, and allow to 
cool. 


Stimulates Milk Productio’ 


Experiments With Hormones Expect- 
> ed To Bring Results ~~ - 

New experiments with a gland 
secretion which stimulates milk pro- 
duction by dairy cattle, and may do 
the same thing for human mothers, 


_|are being undertaken by the agricul- 


ture department. 

Injection of the secretion—a hor- 
mone—improves on nature by stimu- 
lating: production of milk in animals 
that have never borne young as well 
as in those that have. 

Hormones are chemical substances 
carried through the body in the blood 
stream and necessary to stimulate 
various organs to normal activity. 

A large percentage of human 
mothers now are unable to produce 
enough milk to nourish a baby. Fur- 
ther development of this milk-pro- 
ducing hormone may make it possible 
to use it as a stimulant of milk pro- 
duction so that such mothers can 
nurse their children normally, said 
Everette I, Evans, of the bureau of 
dairy industry, who reported on the 
experiments. 


Extinct Animals 


Trustee Of British Museum Is Afraid 
Gorillas And Whales Will Be 
Added To List 

Possibility gorillas and whales 
would be added in a few years to 
the growing list of extinct mammals 
was seen by Rt. Hon. A. L. Fisher, 
warden of New College, Oxford, Eng- 
land, and trustee of the British 
museum, Mr. Fisher was in Murray 
Bay for a short visit before leaving 
for Gaspe to attend the Jacques Car- 
tier quarter-centennial celebrations 
as one of the official British dele- 
gates. : 

Mr. Fisher was minister of educa- 
tion in Lloyd George's war-time cabi- 
net and is now a member of the gov- 
erning body of the Museum of Nat- 
ural History which is occupied in en- 
deavoring to protect whales and 
gorillas from extinction at the hands 
of whalers and hunters. 

“Unless we are careful,” Mr, Fisher 
said, ‘there will not be a gorilla or a 
whale left in the world in a few 
years.” 


Has No Practical Value 
No apparatus yet developed by 
man is of any practical ‘value in 
starting or stopping rain, Electrical 
devices, sprinkling the clouds with 


dry ice, starting large fires, and set- 
ting off loud explosions, among the 
other rainmaking schemes suggested, 
either do not work or cost too much 
for practical use. 


Saskatchewan Oasis 


Flowers And Vegetables Grown In 
Beauty Spot In Drouth Area 

Four miles west of Willow Bunch, 
Sask., just off the highway leading 
into St. Victpr, is the site of an aban- 
doned coal mine. 

The mine became unproductive and 
settlers, years ago, moved into the 
vicinity. They discovered springs of 
Pure, clear water flowing up from 
underground sources and in the ‘in- 
tervening years have turned the old 
coal mine site into an oasis that, to- 
day, is an outstanding beauty spot in 
the centre of thé south's worst dried- 
out area, 

The place is a home, a garden and 
a picnic grounds and belongs to two 
pioncer owners, thrifty men of the 
old cow-puncher days, C. Champigny 
and A. Dauphenais. 

The latest methods of irrigation 
and culture have been applied and, 
for a reward, the two pioneers have 
one of the beauty spots of the west 
Landscaped in the centre of a 40- 
acre bluff, the garden produces fruit 
and vegetables and flowers in great 
abundance. 

The project was made a_ success 
not without hard work. The land 
was cleared in parts, of trees and 
stumps and stones; a vast amount 
of work was done to grade and level 
the plot; fertilizer was worked into 
the soil. 

Flowing springs were harnessed, 
so that the 25,000-gallon-a-day water 
supply would do its best work and 
in the proper way. 

Every inch of the two and a half 
acres is irrigated by the scientific use 
of the spring water, From the 
ground grow native shrubs, flowers, 
water melons, beans and sugar beets. 
Melons of all kinds, musk, Banna, 
French melon; dill, cucumbers, toma- 
toes. Then there is every kind of 
flower imaginable and almost every 
variety of vegetable one could desire. 

The yield of cucumbers this sea- 
son the owners estimate at one and 
one-half tons. Tomatoes will equal 
14,000 pounds. 

To this Saskatchewan oasis—a 
breath of green and a touch of fer- 
tility in a wind-swept district 
come many people to marvel at the 
wonders of growth and the ,abun- 
dance of produce, made possible by 
the perseverance and skill of two 
men, 

Not without results, 


their years of 


strenuous.toil and their application, 
to the’ needs of “the “latid, Have’ ~ 


brought about an example of what 
may be done with irrigation and the 
proper application of working prin- 
ciples, 
To the 
many of 


hundreds of families in 
the dry areas, the two 
agrarians have made possible the 
obtaining of fresh garden produce 
and have set an example and taught 
a lesson in scientific garden farming 
in the drought area. 


Friends Of Garden 
Many Types Of Insects Are Of 
Great Help 
All garden insects ate not injur- 


ious. In fact many of them are bene- 
ficial, continually doing good by de- 


stroying those species which are - 


harmful. Foremost among the in- 
sects that help the gardener are the 
different kinds of ladybird beetles. 
Both in their larval and adult stages, 
they feed almost exclusively upon 
plant lice and scale insects, Another 
kind of beetle, the fiery ground beetle, 
is a particularly useful insect. This 
beetle and its voracious grub, which 
is called the cut worm lion, destroy 
enormous numbers of cut worms. 
The beetle is brownish-black, with 


the wing-cases spotted with coppery ~ 


red—hence its name. The large. 
harpulas beetle, which is very com- 
mon, destroys cut worms, The dif- 


ferent kinds of lace-wing, and other 


two and four winged parasitic flies 
are also friends of the gardener. 


Editor Was In a Bad Way 


He Was Going To Need A Lot Of 
Things If His Subscribers Dig 
Not Pay Up 

It is reported that one of the fas- 
tidious newly-married ladies of this 
town kneads bread with her gloves 
on. This incident may be somewhat 
peculiar, but there are others. The 
editor of this paper needs bread with 
his shoes on, he needs bread with his 


_pants on, and unless some of the de- 


linquent subscribers to this “Old Rag 
of Freedom” pony up before long he 
will need bread without a darn thing 
on, and Wisconsin is no Garden of 
Eden in the winter.-“Mills Mes- 
senger” (U.8.) 


Amarant was the giant slain by 
the legendary Guy of Warwick in the 
Holy Land. 


On the average men are five 
inches taller and about 50 pounds 
heavier than women. 


° 


a DTS UC RIED URE eraprees Sohne eee =. mrseye = eye $n 5 
. ¥ palagones iii as nr } Ce Ae ee shal ‘ 
s THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA 


A Viki’ End 


— Price Does Not Count — | Agricultural Notes. 


‘ptpnsg wine Ea a 5 


BRIEFLY TOLD 


Raymond Poincare, former premier 
of France, who “saved the franc” in 
1925, recently observed his °74th 
birthday. 

The price. of flour in London was 
reduced one shilling per bag of 280 
pounds. The new price is 31 shillings 
and sixpence including the four shil- 
lings provided by the Wheat Quota 
Act. 

Premier Mitchell F, Hepburn, of 
Ontario, declared his government 
would welcome introduction of unem- 
ployment insurance by the Dominion 
administration. 

Ten United States army bombing 
planes, comprising the Alaska flight 
squadron, landed at Bolling field, 
Washington, recently, completing 
their 10,000 mile round trip to the 
north. 

Kidnapping, not murder, is the 
most heinous crime of this era, B, K. 
Sandwell, editor of the Toronto Sat- 
urday Night, declared in a recent ad- 
dréss. 

The discovery of a vegetable fluid 
which may supersede the use of blood 
for purposes of transfusions was 
made known to the delegates of the 
26th annual convention of the Veget- 
able Growers’ Association of America 
at Toronto. 

Premier Benito Mussolini is not 
necessarily unfavorable to restoration 
of a monarchy in Austria or even 
over a combined Austria-Hungary, he 
told Archduke Otto Von Hapsburg in 
a secret interview recently in Italy. 

“We shall hot only oppose a recom- 
mendation of a 40-hour week as the 
means for relieving unemployment, 
but we are firmly opposed to such 
a system,” was the conclusion of an 
inquiry by the League of British In- 
dustries, in a report on the question. 

Amy Johnson Mollison will be the 
first woman ot on the regular 
cross-channel service. She accepted 
a post as commercial pilot with Im- 
perial Airways, explaining she wants 
the maximuni practice before she en- 
ters the London-to-Australia air 
races with her husband next October. 

Prospecting for diamonds will be 
undertaken for the first time in Bri- 
tish Columbia’s history by Thomas 
W. Hindmarsh and George Ogsden, 
both of Vanderhoof, B.C. Leases on 
two 10-acre pieces on the Nechako 
river, sought by the two men for this 
purpose, were approved by the pro- 
vincial cabinet. ; 


Wheat Exports 


Total Exports For Past Twelve 
Months Show Falling Off 

Wheat sent to the United Kingdom 
in July totalled 8,214,546 bushels of 
the value of $6,575,382 compared with 
10,372,284 at $7,861,321 a year ago, 
the bureau of statistics announced. 
The total export of wheat to all coun- 
tries during the past 12 months was 
70,000,000 bushels less than in the 
previous 12 months and to the United 
Kingdom about 42,000,000 less. 

July export of wheat flour to the 
United Kingdom was 264,595 barrels, 
valued at $935,326, compared with 
235,044 valued at $824,972 a year 
ago. The export to the United King- 
dom in the past 12 months was 2,- 
718,114 barrels, valued at $9,331,958, 
compared with 2,373,063, valued at 
$7,639,050 in the previous 12 months. 
The export to the United Kingdom is 
about half of the total export to all 
countries. 


Must Be A Habit 


Magistrates Free Man Because 

Change Carried In Left Pocket 

In which trouser pocket does a 
man carry his change? The question 
arose in a recent case in a Rhyl, 
Wales, court. A man accused of 
stealing a shaving brush from a drug 
store said he placed it in his right 


hand while he put his left hand in his 5 4 


pocket for the money. The druggist 
then showed him a dearer brush, 
which he bought. Near home he 
found he still had the cheaper brush 
in is right hand and before he could 
return it the police came. After his 
testimony the magistrates placed 
their hands in their trouser pockets. 
Their money was in their left-hand 
pockets, and they freed the man._ 


A new radio typewriter has trans- 
miitted a weather map with tabulated 
weather data in 74% minutes, as com- 
pared with about 15 minutes re- 
quired -by the wire machines now in 
service. 


Milkman—“If you won't pay for 
your milk, you might at least give 
back the empty bottles.”* 

Woman—'What do you allow for 


OP.R. Steamship On Pacific Coast 
To Be Broken Up 

An old queen of the coast-seas of 
British Columbia, with the memories 
of many mariners upon her decks, 
had been. given a viking's end re- 
cently. 

The Canadian Pacific Steamships 
8.8. Princess Royal, already stripped 
of the fittings that made her a pas- 
senger liner, was given a bath of oil 
and the torch put to her. She blazed 
to a fitting finish as she lay broad- 
side to the beach between Esquimalt 
lagoon and Albert Head. What is 
left of her will be broken into scrap 
and shipped to Japan. 

The Princess Royal was built at 
Esquimalt in 1907, registered 981 
tons, and was 228 feet long. 


The Canadian Grain Act 
Wheat Graded To The Best Market- 


ing Advantage 

Among the eight bills affecting 
agriculture which became law dur- 
ing the 1934 session of the Dominion 
parliament was an act to amend the 
Canada Grain Act. The changes in 
this act place the statutory grades 
of No. 2 Manitoba Northern wheat 
on the same basis as No. 1 Northern 
Hard and No. 1 Manitoba Northern 
in so far as milling quality is con- 
cerned, and also empowers the West- 
ern Standard Committee to deal with 
the different varieties of grain which 
may be developed from time to time, 
so that they may be graded to the 
best marketing advantage without 
interfering with the quality of the 
main Canadian standard grades. 


JAUNTY SMARTNESS AND SLIM- 
NESS, TOO 


In coat type dress so smart for 
now and early fall days. 

To-day’s smart pattern shows a 
new youthful version of the coat 
dress in slim, straight wrap-around 
style. A woman rather heavily built 
could also wear this model. It is 
rosewood-brown novelty rayon crepe 
that looks like woolen. The attrac- 


Canton crepe, heavy pebbled cre: 
metal threaded oedtios in woolen, 
gay angora woolen, etc. ave other 
lovely materials. 

‘ Style No, 542 is designed for sizes 
16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 
inches bust, Size 86 requires 3% 
yards of 39-inch material with 1% 
yards of 89-inch contrasting. 


How To Order Patterns 


beats ad 
Aagie MeDermot Aver Winnipeg 
Pattern No. .....-—.- Size... 
PROTO a me wet we me oe mt te ee 
hieapienlbesnsntnenpaiiinaiada 


TOWD oe wo oe oe we me tee mv eennie 


BPO Ome Oe eee oe eeee 


(By Gordon H. Guest, M.A.) 


Insecticides are classified into 
poison sprays, or stomach poisons, | 
and contact poisons. The former. 
cause death when taken internally, | 
while the latter bring about destruc- 
tion of life by mere contact. Pyre- 
thrum belongs to the contact class of 
insecticides. Arsenic compounds are 
usually found in poison sprays, Fine- 
ly divided lead arsenate suspended in 
water is used extensively and is very 
effective. Calcium arsenate is much 
cheaper and more abundant than lead 
arsenate. It is used to wage war 
against the bollweevil, which is very 
destructive to the cotton plant. It is 
also used to destroy the potato beetle. 
Aeroplanes are employed to drop the 
calcium arsenate in the form of a 
fine dust upon the cotton plant. 

Oil emulsions, produced by the ad- 
dition of fish-oil soaps to oil, are used 
to a considerable extent. Nicotine, a’ 
complex compound found in tobacco, | 
is rapid and effective in the desthuc- 
tion of insects. Lime-sulphur spray 
is used against scale insects. This is| 
prepared in concentrated form by 
boiling. together water, sulphur, and | 
slaked lime. Prussic acid is used as 
a fumigant in greenhouses and on 
nursery stock. It is an extremely 
poisonous substance. 


signer, Expects To Stage Comeback 


, But Paul Polret, Famous Dress De-| Bears No Relation To Nutrition 


Value Of Food 


Still living in his penthouse apart-| A two-penny kipper has infinitely 
ment in Paris, but dependent for| more food value than two shillings 
food and clothing upon charity and a/ worth of caviar. Expensive foods 
70-cent daily wnemployment dole,|more frequently make for fatness 
Paul Poirét is dreaming of a come-/ than fitness. 
back in the dressmaking realm he| These are two points made by Sir 
once ruled. Charles Higham, who has recently 

“I spend most of my time with] been collecting information as to how 
scissors and cloth,” said the former | price relates to the nutritive value of 
king of Paris dressmakers, as he told| foods. “My conclusion,” said Sir 
of his misfortune. “I cut out dresses.| Charles in an interview, ‘is that 
Sometime someone will. buy one and| bread—the cheapest of all foods— 
I will start on the road back to suc-| heads the list of nutritive foods. 
cess.” “Many well-meaning people do not 

“I haven't given up,” he declared | realize this fact. The unemployed are 
firmly, although he has been out of| often fed on soups, but, as Dr. Hare, 
work for 18 months and stands in| of Lincoln, pointed out just recently, 
line with thousands of others to get|thin soup has no nutritive value at 


| his card punched and receive his dole.| all, and even a plateful of ‘thick, 


He does not know how much longer | nourishing soup,’ made from peas or 
he will be able to keep the penthouse | potatoes, is only equivalent to half a 


apartment, sole remaining sign of his 
former great wealth. 

Once Poiret’s entertainment in his 
chateaux and his three yachts at- 
tracted the aristocracy of the world. 


No Camping In Church 


St. Paul’s Cathedral Puts Ban On 
Picnics In Pews ° 
Persons wishing to go on picnics 
will ,in future, have to look for camp- 
ing spots other than the pews of St. 
Pauls’ Cathedral, according to an 


Many of the poison gases used in| .aict issued by church authorities. 


the late war have been tested to dis- 
cover if they might be used in the 
warfare against insects. One of these, | 
chloropicrin, is the most promising. 
Only a few of the more important 
insecticides have been mentioned. 
Science is continually developing new 
destructive agents and more efficient 
ways of applying them in this ever- 
lasting struggle of mankind against 
insects and fungi. : 


Crows Foresee Disaster 

That crows have a foreboding of 
disaster was shown recently in Og- 
more Vale, Wales. For 90 years 
crows have built their nests in the 
branches of a lofty oak 200 years 
old. Without warning they all moved | 
to another tree. A week later their 


‘home tottered in a breeze and fel, 


After the crash the crows cawed 
triumphantly. ’ 


It takes a wise man to give a 
woman advice without incurring her 
enmity. 


Jack Miner, the Canadian natural- 
ist, lecturer and author, was recently 
asked to what were his religious be- 
liefs. The bird lover paused for a 
moment and then quietly replied very 
emphatically: 

“T believe in any religion that is for 
the betterment and uplift of human- 
ity. I belong to the Methodist 
Church, which is now part of the 
United Church. I suppose the prin- 
cipal reason for this is, when I was 
but. 24 years of age, I was married; 
my wife be to that church. 
As I belonged to no church then, I 
felt it my duty to go.with her. I 
firmly believe there would be more 
happy lives and happy homes if hus- 
bunds and wives. attended the same 
religious services, whether it be 
Roman Catholic or Protestant. 

Well, you say you believe in any 


| cathedral verger declared. ‘The other 


“JACK MINER AND RELIGION” 


By REV. W. E. McKILLOP, D.D. 


“We have in the past been turn- 
ing a ‘blind eye’ to many abuses,” a 


day I found a man in a pew reading 
a newspaper and smoking a pipe, and 
when I remonstrated at such action 
in a house of worship he replied that 
he had only come in to get out of 
the rain.” 

By action of the chapter, however, 
use of the cathedral for anything but 
devotions will be prohibited in the 
future. 


May Erect Giant Tower 
A giant tower, 6,600 feet high, six 
times as high as Hiffel Tower, has 
been proposed as a means of defend- 
ing Paris, France, against aerial at- 
tacks. It would be built of reinforc- 
ed concrete. Platforms would be 
provided at various elevations for 
the launching of aeroplanes and as 

bases for anti-aircraft artillery. 


It’s easier for a woman to hold a 
strong man than her own tongue. 


worship but occasionally on long lec- 
ture tours, I am unable to be there. 
But, I will say this, when I am away, 
I try to attend some us service 
and I receive a blessing attending 
it, no matter in what church or ser- 
vice it may be.” 

The next question asked the famed 
naturalist was on his opinion of 
church union: 


thought very much about, except in 
this way; if we want to do big busi- 
ness financially, we amalgamate our 
banks. So if we want to do big busi- 
ness for Christianity, why not amal- 
gamate our churches? We don’t wor- 
ship our churches, or at least I hope 
we don’t,” said the naturalist. “We 
worship God. So if we can do greater 
thinge in the Christian world at 
home and abroad by uniting three 


Jack Miner about to liberate a tagged Canada Goose to study their 


route of migration. One side of the tag has Jack Miner's Post Office 
address, while on the opposite side of the tag is a verse of scripture, which 


is Jack Miner's unique way in spreading the Gospel to the Indians and 


Eskimos of the far north, \ 


religions that are uplifting and for| Christian churches, then I'm in favor 
“But,” he con- 


the betterment of humanity, and yet 
you belong to the United Church.” 
“I believe,” 


of church union.” 


slice of bread.” 

Sir Charles Higham's conclusion 
is that price bears no relat'on to food 
value. He quoted Professor Mot- 
tram, the authority on dietetics, who 
says: “It is the demands of the 
palate which cost most—not those of 
the body's requirements. 

“Suppose, for exaniple, we wish 
to buy fuel for the body—we may 
buy it as bread at three cents per 
1,000 calories or as an American 
breakfast cereal at about 16 cents 
per 1,000. The effect as regards 
warming the body and supplying 
building materials is almost certainly 
the same.” 


Recipes For This Week 


(By Betty Barciay) 


ORANGE NUT BISCUITS 

(Makes 18 medium sized biscuits) 

2 cups sifted flour 

4 teaspoon baking powder 

1 teaspoon salt 

% cup sugar 

% cup shortening 

% cup finely chopped nuts 


1 tablespoon orange marmalade. 
Sift dry ingredients together. Cut 
in shortening. Add nuts. Beat egg; 
pour into measuring cup; add enough 
orange juice to’: make % cup. Com- 


in hot oven (425 degrees F.) for 10 
to 15 minutes. tthe 

Note: A little more orange juice 
will be needed with some flours to 
make the dough soft. 


——e 


CARROTS AND PEAS 


2 cups cubed carrots 
1 cup cooked peas 
8 tablespoons butter 


Boil. the carrots until tender. Com- 
bine with the cooked peas, reheat and 
serve with melted butter or make a 
sauce of the flour, butter, milk and 
seasonings, add the cooked carrots 
and peas, reheat and serve hot. 


Coal Mine Fire Extinguished 
Fire In Colorado Mine Was Burning 
For 25 Years 

A coal mine fire that has smolder- 
ed nearly 25 years at Matheson, 
Colo., is dying out, virtually extin- 
guished by an 1l-week battle waged 
by a crew of 25 men working under 
the direction of the United States 
geological survey. 

Recently workmen succeeded in 
cutting clear around the burning 
area, leaving it to burn itself out. 
Hundreds of pounds of explosives 
were used in surrounding the blaze. 

The fire started when campers lit 
a fire on an outcropping of a coal 
vein. It has blazed or smoldered 
ever since, eating far into the under- 
ground workings. : 


Folks Are Generous 
Detective Dressed As Mendicant Col- 
lects $40 In Six Days 


A Scotland Yard detective dis- 
guised himself as an ex-sailor selling 


tinued “it always takes time to get | matches, when he was in search of 


replied Jack Miner,| things working harmoniously and 1 
“every man should belong to some|am only sorry church union wasn't 


a “wanted” man. In this disguise he 


church which gives him one central! unanimous, for it is so much nicer stood on a prominent London side- 
of worship and which will) when all are of one accord and things | walk for six days and eventually se- 


ume him to take a more active 
in Christianity than he would if he 
from one church to another,” 


“When you have been away from |: t be similarly termed 


home every myaeey I have seen 
your way 
erent 


go smoothly.” 
Jack Miner himself 
jue personality, 


cured his man, He also received 


possesses a v 
His tuary nearly. $40 from kind-hearted passers- 
. Those |ȴ- Most of the contributors merely 


who know his home are aware of the | passed him a copper or two without 


Other irectl 

r directly in front of his home. 

A cement path, in which a motto is 
runs from each entrance. 


Interesting Items Gleaned From, 
Many Sources 

Canada exported 387 live cattle to. 
Hong Kong, China, for dairying pur- 
poses during the first three months: 
of 1934, 

Hogs graded in Canada during the 
82 weeks of 1934 up to August 9, 
totalled 1,882,717, as against 1,968,- 
651 in thé corresponding period of 
1983. 

The general effect of the customs 
changes in the Fiji Islands is to in- 
crease the margin of preference. to. 
imports from Canada and other Em- 
pire countries, 

There has been more tomato puree, 
tomato sauce and ketchup, and 
tomato soup imported into the Bri- 
tish Isles from Canada than from 
any other country during the first 
six months of 1934, 

Reports from Moscow show that. 
there has been considerable difficulty 
in the Russian production of harvest- 
ing machinery, particularly harvester 
combines, and this has had an effect 
on harvesting arrangements. 

The total stocks of Canadian wheat 
in Canada on July 31, 1934, were 
193,322,863 bushels—18,417,325 bush- 
els less than the total on the corre- 
sponding date in 1933, but 61,478,057 
bushels more than on July 31, 1932. 

Shipments of livestock from West- 
ern to Eastern Canada for the 31 
weeks of this year, up to August 2, 
(1933 figures within brackets) in- 
cluded 48,575 (338,062) cattle; 484 
(145) calves; 140,015 (199,375) hogs, 
and 45,000 (33,945) sheep. 

For the first six months of 1934, 
Canada exported to the London 
(England) market the following can- 
ned fruits: 71,722 cases of pears}. 
14,385 cases of loganberries; 2,882 
cases of peaches, and 40,964 cases of 
canned apples. 

A trial shipment of Ontario apples 
in hampers made in 1933 to Egypt 
has been well received. It consisted 
of Ganos, Baldwin, and Ben Davis, 
mentioned in order of preference. The 
Ganos in particular, says the Cana- 
dian Trade Commissioner in Egypt, 
should be able to find an outlet in 
Egypt so as to meet the demand for 
red apples. rs 
. The meat from which soup has 
been made becomes rather tasteless, 
but it still contains most of its, 
nourishment. Therefore, it may be 
used in hash, meat pies and ragouts, 


Choose and Cook It, Dominion De- 
partment of Agriculture Bulletin. 

The Japanese wheat crop of this 
year is estimated at 44,491,150 bush- 
els. It is considered that the annual 
consumption of wheat is about 45,- 
000,000 bushels, so that the five-year 
plan instituted two years ago by the 
Japanese government to grow suffici- 
ent wheat for domestic “purposes 
seems to be almost attained in the 
second year of the attempt. 

Latest estimates of wool produc- 
tion for the five principal exporting 
countries (Australia, New Zealand, 
South Africa, Argentina, and Uru- 
guay) for the 1933-34 season which 
has just ended (except in South 
America) point to a net decrease, 
greasy basis, of nearly 200 million 
pounds, or 9 per cent., in comparison 
with the 1932-33 season. 


Open Cans With Claws 


Glacier Park Bears Enjoy Everything 
But Spinach 

Glacier Park bears eat anything 
that comes in cans—anything except 
spinach—according to Dr. George R. 
Ruhle, chief naturalist. 

Pble found a ranger’s cabin that 
had been broken into. Every can 
had been opened, 

“The bears had eaten everything,” 
he said, “except the spinach.” 

TT sceptics who doubted the bears’ 
ability to open tin cans, Ruble ex- 
plained: 

“They just ram a claw through the 
tin and draw it around the edge— 
as slick a job as any can opener will 
do.” 


Methods of prevention of dry rot 
of corn in the foothills region of the 
North Caucasus are being studied by 
Russian scientists, because of the 
discovery of the ‘disease after the 
American variety Ivory King had 
been introduced to the Caucasus in 
91929. 


Office Boy—‘I ain't feeling so 
good; kin I have the afternoon off?” 

Boss-—-"‘Why don’t you tell me your 
grandmother is dead?” 

Office Boy—‘I’m saving her for 
later in the season.” 


European manufacturer is mak- 


A 
ing paper from the refuse ends of qs- + 


paragus. 


ra 
4 


rk che Shot 


FS Biota 


saith Sacer! Sin 


iboaacn 


LE er Ne Te EH 


NT 
ayy 


EEA REN 


or ,. aageaae i éi aeese j 


Boys Girls 


Here's a PAINTING BOOK 
FREE for the asking | 


You are just going to love the Painting Book 
for you by the makers of Keen's 

ustard . fe a of dandy pictures that you 
your own paints or crayons! 


@And a chance to 
WIN one of the 
many fine prizes | 


can colour 


Tell Mother you are going to the 
store to geta KEEN’S GIFT BOOK! 


Get your copy right away, for dealer has 
only alimited number for free distribution, and 
we don't want YOU to miss out on this gift, 
You, too, will say “It's as Keen as Mustard! 


And maybe you will win a fine prize — In 
money, a bicycle, roller skates or a ping 
pong set, baseball, bats or dolls or doll's 
caniage, etc. Wouldn't that be grand? 

Remember, you don't have to buy anything 
to get this book, though when you tell Mother 
she will probably want you to bring a tin of 
KEEN’S MUSTARD back yim ree. So get 
busy. Ask for your book today. Start painting 
and show folks what a swell artist you are. 


KEEN’S 
DSF. Mustard 


|}OCCASIONAL WIFE 


EDNA ROBB WEBSTER 


| after referring to Camilla first in a 
casual manner. 

“Poor little impulsive thing! I sup- 
pose it accounts for her genius. A 
| girl like that never should fall in 
love. Her emotions are too violent, 
and jealousy is always her fatal un- 
doing—like her breaking your statue. 
I’m sure you forgave her for that, 
after what happened.” 

He turned quickly to face her. 
“Why, Camilla never did that!” 


Author of “Joretta”, “Lipstick 
Girl” Ete. 


SYNOPSIS 


Camilla Hoyt and’ Peter Anson, 
young and in love, marry secretly, 
‘deciding to live their own lives apart 


until Peter is able t i eco ee 
r is able to prov «| ; z 

Peter's youte # Ncaniine sculptor | S0ftly, “then she didn’t tell you, after 

trying to win a competition for a) all? 


scholarship abroad and Camilla is the 
adopted daughter of a wealthy fam- 
ily. She is not to inherit monéy 
when she comes of age and 80 


“Tell me what?” sharply. 
“Why—all about ‘t. She came to 


is |™me the next day and begged me to 


are in love with some man who 
doesn’t—reciprocate?"” 

She nodded silently her head rest- 
ing against the back of the chair 
and her half-open eyes watching him 
covertly. ' 

*T'd say he was all kinds of,a sap 
not to wake up and find himself,” 
Peter declared forcefully, then sighed 
deeply. “Gosh, this love business is a 
wild, untamed thing, anyway. Why 
do people select their life partners 


by practical reasoning as we venture 
into any other kind of business?” 
“Because there is no getting away 
from love, I guess,” pensively. 
“Well, what is it, then? How do 
we recognize it when we do find it? 
Why isn’t it complete for us?” 


never had been in love!” 

“Why 7?" tersely. 

“Because you would know the an- 
swers to all those questions.” 

Silence Then “Well, I don’t.” He 
could not escape from that strang- 


about Camilla had given him. The 
thought that she, his precious Camilla, 
would so betray and humiliate him 


efforts tortured him like the closing 
of a garrote around his neck. He 
might have doubted her guilt, had 
Avis not told him so simply and as if 
unaware that she was betraying the 
other’s confidence in her No, it was 
true enough; but the more he revolv- 
ed the thing in his mind, the more 
confused and hurt and angry he be- 
came. 

He brooded in silence for awhile, 
into which Avis did not intrude. 
Finally, he arose impatiently as if the 
inertia of sitting quietly was no 
longer to be endured. “Should you 
like to go in?” he asked tensely. 
“I’m not much of a companion this 
evening This thing has got me— 
about Camilla. I hope you under- 
stand that I'm not—-” 

“Of course,” she interrupted kind- 
ly, “I’m only so sorry that I men- 
tioned it, Peter.” 

“‘T’m glad—mighty glad to know 
it,” he contradicted. “More than any- 
thing else, I hate deceit. It helps a 
lpt to know just how things stand.” 

“Well, don’t you do anything rash 


“Why, Peter, you talk as if you) 


ling sensation which Avis’ revelation | 


at the very climax of his ambitious | 
efforts tortured him life the closing) 


studying commercial art in the hope |help her some way to make it up to 


of landing an agency job. Others in 
the story are Avis Werth, another 
wealthy girl who is trying to win 
Peter. Sylvia Todd, Peter's model, 
and Gus Matson, his former room- 
mate with whom he has q 

After a party at an exclusive ‘club, 
when the rest of the members of the 
party go to a cabaret to continue the 
gaietv, Peter and Camilla slip off to 
the beach by themselves and fall 
asleep on the sand. When they awake 
it is early morning and Avis and 
another boy are standing near them. 
This makes it necessary for Camilla 
to announce before the party that 
she and Peter are married. Camilla 


pe 
to sont a loan of $1,000. Peter fin- 
ishet exhibit and asks Avis and 


“Eage! 
and Avis “Inspiration”. 


—like jumping overboard.” ‘ 

“Not on your life I think I have 
discovered one more thing tonight— 
that love isn’t worth all the suffer- 
ing we take with it.” 

“Oh, Peter, dear don’t be cynical,” 
Avis pleaded 

“I’m not. Only being sensible.” 

She laughed softly “You are much 
too romantic to renounce love. Get a 
hold of yourself, please. Gcod night, 
Peter.” 

He smiled down at her with a new 
tenderness. “Good night, little pal.” 

She carried away with her the 
light in his eyes, hugging it to her 
heart; remembered the vehemence of 
his renunciation of love, That would 
do for a beginning, she exulted. If 
she could take him along that far 
toward her goal within four days, 


you. I supposed she had told you, 
after the way you won the exhibit.” 

“You don’t mean—that she delib- 
erately destroyed it, and then—” des- 
perately. " 

Avis gestured hopelessly. “She 
wasn't really wholly to blame. Just 
saw red, or green, whatever jealousy 
makes you see, and did it in a sud- 
den fit of revenge—then instantly 
regretted it.” Her voice was smooth, 
soft, convincingly sympathetic. 

Peter was silent for awhile. Fin- 
“But what did she come to you 
about?” 

“Told me that she had persuaded 
you to enter the other group in the 
exhibit and begged me to try to in- 
fluence Uncle John and the commit- 
tee in your favor.” 


sabes 


~~ ARERR Big is oe 


Peter adopts the latter title and 
Camilla, heartsick, goes to Peter’s 
studio for quiet and to think. Peter 
and Avis follow later, and as the 
lights are turned on, see the statue 
has been shattered to pieces. ie 
accuses Camilla of this, 
Camilla, stunned by poy Shey and 
hurt and horrified by the accusation, 
faints. 
At Camilla’s suggestion, 

ters as his exhibit a statue he had 
sculptured especially for her as a 
wedding gift. They named it “Land 


groan. “Is that—why I—?” 
smile. 
went to see him, but his vote al- 
ready was cast for you and I hadn't 
a thing to do with it. As for his in- 
fluencing the committee, I knew that 
was impossible and never suggested 
such a thing, It would have hurt his 
pride to allow him to think that I 


of Hove”. 
ld venture to persuade him For- 
Camilla’: wo 
aad Thy Toes eat wate’ pe tunately, it turned out all right for 


you. It was obvious that Uncle John 
was not the only one who voted for 
‘your piece, but it happened that his 
vote was the deciding factor. You 

won by a single vote.” Ris 

He smoked in silence agein, 
she was wise enough not to intrude 
then into those hurt, bewildered 
thoughts which she knew were strug- 
gling within him. After awhile, sh 
reached over and touched his hand 

CHAPTER LVIII. lightly. 


“I’m sorry, I shouldn't have men- 
It was in such a mood, when Peter) tioned it, but I have felt so sorry 
had been exceptionally gentle and) ¢oy Camilla all this time and I think 
policitous during the evening, that) about it often. She must be very 
Avis ventured upon a long-dropped madly in love wtih you to have done 
subject while they smoked and talked | thing like that.” 
in a secluded corner of the deck to-| «yyaq enough,’ the exclaimed with 
gether. He had not mentioned 


; vehement coldnavss, “but that can’t be 
Camilla's name in her presence that| j,ye: ow could anyone be cruel to 
day, and she risked the remark) the one you loved?” 


She hesitated then, “I'm sure I 

‘| couldn't, but there are all kinds of 
love, you know, Camilla is so emo- 
tional that she expresses everything 
she feels in action, But there is also 


artist who was so ably stimulating 
business for his company. 

Peter's exhibit was awarded the 
Paris scholarship, and he prepares 
for his journey to France. After the 
ship's departure from New York, he 
is on his way to his cabin when he 
meets Avis Werth. 


(New Go On With The Story) 


““‘Blue”’ Spells 


eas Seaeen of theirowm | deep, quiet, steadfast love.” 
the Vegetable Gompound “How do you know so much shout 
when they feel blues” | it?” he asked colorlessly. 
pening on. It gnadiios quiver- She drew a quick breath, sighed. 
fey a De othee, | “‘Ab, that is another story-——that I— 


couldn't tell you, Peter.” 

“You have been — hurt, too?” 
gently. 

“Not—by love But what is one to 
do when there is no love with which 
to be hurt?” 

He hesitated a moment. “Then you 


LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S 
~~ VEGETABLE COMPOUND 


He sat forward suddenly with a 


She shook her head with a slow 
“On my honor—no, Peter. I 


what might she not accomplish in a 
year? By that time, she could make 
him wonder what he ever saw that 
was attractive about Camilla. She 
would make herself indispensable to 
his life. 

Camilla resolutely. followed the 
routine of her days and thanked the 
benevolence of blessed, fatiguing, 
mind-occupying work. If two days 
could be so interminable and wretchb- 
ed as. this, how was she going to en- 
dure the year ahead of her? She tried 
to convince herself that as time 
passed, she would become accustom- 
ed to Peter’s absénce and would be 
happier, But she did not want time 
and absence to dull her need of Peter. 
If so, what then? She wou)d have 
nothing left Nothing for which to 
live and hope and work. Life then 
would be just a monotonous exist- 
ence, without aim or reason or pleas- 
ure. 

And what if Peter, immersed in 
his work, involved in his new life, 
discovered that his longing for her 
was dulled? Protest beat with broken 
wings within her breast. 

Resolutely, she put her thoughts 
aside and summoned her will to con- 
centrate upon the fictional lives of 
her characters. She was working at 
the office, but nowhere could she 
prevent her thoughts of Peter enter- 
a secretary announced a gentle- 
man to see her. “He said it was urg- 
ent, but would not give his name,” 
Miss Scott explained. 

Camilla frowned with annoyance. 
“Probably another high-class beggar 
who got in with his air of impor- 
tance. This radio publicity makes 
me a good target for such people. 
Tl see him for a minute.” 

(To Be Continued) 


As long ago as 1868, Westminster, 
England, tried out a red and green 
traffic signal in the form of a gas 
lamp and used only at night. 


{ 
f 


| 


by impulse and emotion instead ofy 


Eloquent Plea Of Indian 
Magistrate Dismisses Case Of Breach 
Of Game Laws 

“Canada is our country; God gave 
us mouths to eat and put game in 
the country for us to live on. It is 
the only way we have of getting a 
living, You white men have an edu- 
cation and a job to live by, but we 
have no other way,” John O'Cese, 
Chippewa Indian chief, explained to 
Magistrate R. E. Thurber at Edson, 
Alta., when charged with illegal pos- 
session of big game carcasses. The 
magistrate dismissed the case. 

Evidence disclosed that in July a 
party of 40 Chippewa Indians moved 
from the Rocky Mountain House dis- 
trict to Marlboro and began to kill 
moose and deer. Alarmed lest game 
should be exterminated through a 
general’ slaughter, citizens com- 
plained. 

The magistrate, in announcing his 
decision, said that unless he had in- 
structions from the attorney-gen- 
eral’s department he could not see 
his way clear to convict the full- 
blooded, non-treaty Indians who do 
not live on reserves, as long as they 
were not making a wholesale slaugh- 
ter. 

He took the stand that the Indians 
knew of no other way of making a 
living and unless the government 
was prepared to look after them, he 
was not prepared to register a con- 
viction. 

A sister of the accused chief, who 
asked if she could address the court 
after evidence was taken, and who 
received permission to do so, describ- 
ed eloquently the experiences of her 
tribe and how loyal they had been to 
the white people in times of trouble. 
She claimed on one occasion when 
the Prince of Wales was visiting in 
their district His Royal Highness had 
told them that they could hunt for 
a living. Her address lasted 45 min- 
utes, during which she made a stir- 
ring plea for her brother, pointing 
out that they had a mother 105 years 
old to take care of. 

On dismissing the case, the magi- 
strate warned the‘chief that he must 
endeavor to obey the laws of the 
land as far as possible. Chief O’Cese 
agreed readily and shook hands with 
the magistrate. 


Proud Of Its Record 


Tree In Nova Scotia 170 Years Old 
Still Bearing Apples 

George R. Whiteman believes he 
has on his farm at Lawrencetown, 
Nova Scotia, the oldest apple-bearing 
tree in the Annapolis valley. It is 
170 years old and in its life-time has 
produced 600 barrels of excellent 
fruit, 

The seed for the leafy giant came 
up with the Whiteman family from 
New England in 1762. It was plant- 
ed by Mr. Whiteman’s great-grand- 
mother. Long years ago the seedling 
tree was grafted with the Nonpareil 
variety: e 

Some seasons it produced 12 bar- 
rels of marketable apples and while 
‘orchardists of Canada’s great or- 
chard country were bemoaning the 
fact that the last severe winter af- 
fected many of their trees, Mr. 
Whiteman’s “old faithful” blossomed 
forth lovelier than ever. 


Paris Has Good Zoo 

Paris’ boasts that its new zoo, 
which was opened by the President 
of France, is one of the largest and 
most complete in the world, It covers 
85 acres in the heart of the Bois de 
Vincennes, on part of the site of the 
Colonial Exhibition of 1931. It is 
larger than the London, Amsterdam 
or Antwerp zoos and contains 2,000 
animals, including specimens from 
every part of the globe. 


Niece (in the picture gallery): 
“Aunt Sarah, this is the famous ‘An- 
gelus’, by Millet.” 

Aunt Sarah: “Well, I never! That 
man had the nerve to copy the calen- 
dar that has hung in our kitchen for 
a dozen years or more.” 


People who own canoes should put 
a “No tipping” sign on them. 


of Waxed 
Paper. 


used in home baking. 
, 
e 
FREE—The Royal Yeast Bake Book to use 
when you bake at home. 23 tested recipes— 
loaf breads, rolls, coffee it Address 
sa mronds 108,. Vonats Bee. & tapas 
e Toronto, Ont. Ask, too, for leaflet, ' 
Royal Road Health." 


1. ames cake wrapped in air-tight waxed 
paper—Royal Yeast Cakes always 
reach you in perfect condition. They keep 
fresh for months—you can be sure of suc- 
cessful results because their full leavening 
power will not deteriorate. That's why 
Royal Yeast Cakes have been the standard 
of quality for over 50 years—why, today, 
they are preferred in 7 out of every 8 
Canadian homes where dry yeast is 


Ancient Doll Goes Modern 


Prized Possession Of Ontario Child 
Is 134 Years Old 

Prized possession of a little Kitch- 
ener, Ontario, girl is a wooden doll 
said to be 134 years old, handed 
down by her great-great-grand- 
mother, in Germany from generation 
to generation. 
. Brought to Canada in a wooden 
chest whose date of manufacture 
was indicated as 1800, the doll is be- 
lieved to have been made the same 
year. The body is wood, with hinges 
fastened with screw nails for joints. 
The head, made of a substance re- 
sembling plaster of paris, is solid 
and fastened to the body with screws. 

Mute witness to the triumphs of 
Napoleonic hosts, to the rise and fall 
‘of monarchs and empires, the doll by 
no means preserves the fashions of 
the dying years of the 18th century, 
Until the present owner obtained the 
doll from her mother, who in turn 
received it from her mother. “Frau- 
lein Gretchen” wore a cretonne gown 
made with a bustle and an old-fash- 
joned bonnet to match. Now, how- 
ever, she flaunts the acme of 
twentieth century modishness. 


THE RHYMING 


OPTIMIST 
By Aline Michaelis 


Two birds, aying wing to wing 
h above plain, 
thro! sunset’s blossoming 
Into night’s domain. ' 


Two birds, heediess of the voice 
Of the wind of nigh! 

Flying to wing rejoice 

In their silent flight. 


Though they lose the sun’s last spark 
And no comrades sing, 

Unafraid, they face the dark, 

Two birds, wing to wing. 


Inventor Of Photography 


Process Of Henry Fox Talbot Dates 
From 1835 

Among inventors who have revolu- 
tionized life, Henry Fox Talbot of 
Lacock, England, is less well remem- 
bered than he should be, although, by 
means of patents, he took peculiar 
pains to establish the priority of his 
inventions over those of Daguerre. 
His centenary thus has particular in-, 
terest. His earliest result dates from 
1835, but he did not learn to “de- 
velop” until 1840. Progress continued 
to be slow and it is uncommon to 
come across photographs of more 
than experimental interest until 
Roger Fenton took & camera out to 
the Crimea in 1855, 


The apricot is supposed to be a 
native of China and was brought in- 
to Burope at the time of, Alexander 
the Great. 


“Study to show thyself approved 
unto God, a workman that needeth 
not to be ashamed.” 2 Timothy 2:15. 

“And let us not be weary in well- 
doing; for in due season we shall 
reap if we faint not.” Galatians 6:9. 


The task Thy wisdom has assigned, 
Oh, let me cheerfully fulfill; 
In all my works Thy presence find, 
And prove Thine acceptable will. 
—C, Wesley. 
What is my next duty? What is 
the thing that lies nearest to me? 
That belongs to your every-day his- 
tory. No one can answer that ques- 
tion but yourself. Your next duty is 
to determine just what your next 
duty is. There may be something you 
neglect, or something you know you 
ought to do. You would know your 
duty if you thought in earnest about 
it and were not ambitious of great 
things. If it is something common- 
place that will make life dreary it 
will soon lead you to something more. 
Your duty will commence to comfort 
you at once, and will at length open 
the unknown fountain of life in your 
heart.—G. MacDonald. 


Large Radio Order. 

An order from South America 
stated tobe worth $1,500,000 and be- 
lieved to be the biggest order for 
radio equipment ever received in the 
United Kingdom, was booked by one 
firm at the opening of the great an- 
nual wireless exhibition at Olympia. 


Robber crabs, natives of Christ- 
mas island, im ‘the Indian ocean, 
climb coco-palm trees and break off 
the coconuts. They hammer in the 
ends of the shells with their strong 
claws. 


Complete holder with refills <= 


DEALERS WANTED 


Biopea aia 


tiencaremeetaetieees oe 


Open season for Hungarians 
Partridge opens at noon 
Sept. 15th. 


Interesting | 


Local Items | 
= Miss Viola Bell of Canniore. 


Tonks, ts at present visiting her par- 


GROCERY SPECIALS 


ITALIAN PRUNES—No. 1 Quality, per.case 


Mr. Basil who ha3 


PEARS—Durchiess pet Case -oeccccecsccccsccsesssesceseesnsseveves -$1.95 ‘een to the coast for his health|evts, Mr. and Mrs. W. Bell. 
te “turned hh last week-end dite ah 

APPLES— SNOWS—Per Case -:1c::ececonsevsiccsssenees ~$1.45 Fite ik Snenvil ~~ Quite n number are aow ask 
PEACHES—Bllberts, Per Case siccecscccccossescsscccosesenes $1.59 ees ing when the Little Theatre 
DAMSONS PLUMS—6 quert basket for BELVO The woodwork from the old} 88? is going to reorranize fo 
GRAVENSTEIN APPLES—Pet nse 4 gq ||" ° factory has been remove| (henson. 
TOMATOERS—Five Pound | bot 4 i and ] f brick 
auniall RI 2 ae emai 26c Ria staal’ oe " Mrs. W.’Bell who received a 

NGS—Per Package eee bsseese siscerdbcbovaiensas * O6c % ¥ nad sshaking up last weak when 


sat fell down the cellar <tairs 
na neighbor’s house, is now 


dle to be out around again. 
se 6 


FLY COILS—Per Dozen 19¢ 
“UR SPECIAL FLOUR— 98 Pounds for ...... $2.45 


THE S. E. GUST STORES 


Phone 214 Free Delivecy 


Heavy rains last Saturday 
aelayed harvesting for a fev 
days. It was a real shower and 
gave the prairie a good soaking. 

ee 5 ‘he local Pressed Brick plar! 
The new house being ouilt «| t+teived a nice order for biichs 
te rear of Gust’s store is 301” 
nearing completion. It will be}&.oon. Prospects are promis 
au tidy little cottage when ‘ir-|*:@ for opening up again in the 
ished, 1: er future. 
es °* 6 

Mrs. P. McDermott, Mrs. Me-| Corpora! J. H. Barnes wh» 
tachlan and Mrs. J. Xitebe: |4iag been in charge of the Med- 
returhed home last Friday aftac|icine Hat detatchment of the 
‘, ending a few weeks visivine |Royal Canadian Mounted Police 
fiiendg in B. C. points. for some time; is being trnster- 

sd cobalt red to Lethbridge. Vice Set7- 

A reward of $5,000 tor the|ennt of Lethbridge will <cme to 
arrest and conviction of the kit-;Medicine Hat. 

‘rappers of John Labatt, wa: opr 


’ Payday Meat Specials Dem 


T Bone or Sirloin Steak or Ronst, Per Pound 
PRIME RIB ROLL—Per Pound .nc---.-:ccccsssssssssss-- 
THICK RIB ROLL—Two Pounds for 
ROUND STEAK—per pound 15¢ or 2 pounds for 25c 
CHOICE POT ROASTW—Per Pound. -..cccsco. cececeecoccccsecssoeose 8e 
BOILING BEEF—Per Pound 


LEAN BONELESS STEW BEEF— 8 Its, for ............ 25c offered by the Ontario govern.| -Mr. Jim Myers of the buwell 
HAMBERG STEAK—Per Pound so-nissovnesisneeemee.. se it ee eee See 
* * 2 in Idaho amg leaves for there in 

Home Made Sausage 2 Ibs. for 25¢ Mr. August Vilidsen aid Mr,|t week ar ten days time.. Mr 

We have also a nice line of VEAL, PORK & LAMB Teo Dube both of Duchess were|! red: Walker Jr. and Mr. Lloyd 


husiness visitors in town lvet{\silliamson left Tuesday morn- 
Sunday. Mr..Dube was form |ing with Mr. Myers’ machinery 
erly employed by the Brick &| mi stock for the long trek 
Coal plant here. acioss country. 
eee eee 

E. W. Beatty. president ef th. | The management of tne Fish 
C. P. R. still maintains chat the; »d Chip Shop, Medicine Hat 
wnification of the C.P.R. and] -.shes to appologise to Redcliff 
Canadian National is inevitable |¢ istomers for the delay in serv- 
+. d the only solution to the rail} # them last Catuyday right. 
way problem of Canada, This wag unavoidable owitg to 
i fs ulty connections on our kiteh- 
vn range.. However this has 
l.eensremedied and we are now 


~BROADWAY MEAT MARKET 
- GH. WORTS, Prop. 


Prepare Now For 
The Fall and Winter 


We can supply you with 
STORM DOORS 
AND WINDOWS 

At Reasonable Prices 


BARGAIN DAY 


AT 
| (LESK’s 
| Furniture. Exchange 


817. = Sixth Avenue 


H. C. Sweet, who has beon 
schoo] inspector for the “ormost 
d‘strict, bas been transferred to 
‘Wedicine Hat to sueceed the|wantg with dispatch in fvture, 
late F.S. Carr. R. A. McGreg!\Ve thank you for your patron- 
cx. late of the Camrose Normal | »2¢.: 
tvhool staff, will go to the For- 
most district as inspector. 

> *- «4 


CARD OF THANKS 


Mr. and Mrs. H. Sangster and 
viys. Sangster’s parents, Mr.| An Auction Sale will be held 
*nd Mrs Smith of Dramnelle: |»c the rear of the Town Hall 0: 
weh to express thetr deep| saturday, Sept. 22 at 2 o’clock 
wpreciatin to Dr. Paterson.|, m., when the goods ani 
Nurse Pow~and their friends ,c! attles of Joseph Boland will 
47d neighbors for their man: ,b sold Terms Cash. 
cts of kindness during th H. N. Dacre, Auctioneer 
«rg illness and subsequent = 
‘: ath of their beloved sister and 
doughter, Margaret Smuth. =| 


Do Your Repairing Now 
When Prices Are Low 
Orders left with H. J, Cox 
Promptly Attended to 


FOR SALE—Fall Rye for seed. 
Apply R. Landis, west of town. 


.. AUCTION SALE 


THE GAS CITY 
PLANING MILL 
First St. Medicine Hat 


LOOK AT YOUR LABEL 


MONARCH 


Mon., Tues. Wed. 


Medicine Hat 


New Fish 
and Chip Shop 


NOW OPEN 


at the Fish Market 


Opposite Safeways, Medicine Hat 


EARER | 


ROBERT 


me 


$ 
on 
RIPTIDEGS 


Now Snowing Two Fine Features _ 


If it’s Bargains 
You’re Looking For 
- You can get them 


“The Witching Hour” and “Private Scandal” AT SERVED IN 
a ee  —|$ Lewis’ Bargain Store 3} | OLD COUNTRY STYLE 
Medicine Hat Prices; 10c, 15c and 25c 


MOORE’S GREAT DRAPERY SALE 


Starts Friday, Sept. 14th 
Marvelous Buys in “All Lines of 
Draperies, Curtains, Scrims, Nets, Muslins, Etc. 
EVERY PIECE ON SALE 


‘100 Yards Dainty Scrim, per yard + - 
Dainty Madras Panels 2 1-4 yds. x 36in.,each - 
Silk Side Drapes, 50 inches wide, per yard - - 


AND HOSTS OF OTHER BARGAINS 


J. J. MOORE & SON 


Phone 2787 Near Medicine Hat Garage 


x~ 


Wonderful New Coats, 
Hats and Dresses Pouring 
into Fleming’s Store 


Fall Styles are Delightfully Different and we 
advise our Redcliff Customers to choose early 


COATS from $14.95 to $65.00 
WOOL DRESSES from $4.95 to $10.95 
SILK DRESSES from $3.95 to $10.95 
HATS Felt and Velvet $1.75 to $2.95 


1c > f 
FLEMING’S °P iisine tie” 


* 


- + 9 
29c 
59c 


‘nich are being shipped to Sask | Gaggia gage 


in apposition to handle your] ° 


SALE SPECIALS 


Our Prices will Prompt Thrifty People to buy their 
Fall and Winter Needs Here This week-end, 


SCHOOL SHOES—Girls’ neat fitting gunmetal Oxfords 
just the shoe to give hard wear, outstanding value $1.95 
CHILDREN’S. STOCKINGS—in neat-fitting wool cotton 
mixture. ideal for school, made in fawn only sizes 
6 to 10, Specially Priced .........6.0.c005. sccevsiptei hetae- tae 
UNDERWEAR—Men’s medium weight combs, tailored 
to fit snugly and guaranteed quality; Special $1.65 
BLANKETS—Largest Size 12|4 Flannelette Blankets 
white and grey, what you need for fall, per pair $2.75 


WORK SHIRTS—New Fall Shirts in a variety of pattens 
wool and cotton mixture, big and roomy, Special,$1.00 


THE HICKS TRADING CO. 


PHILCO RADIOS 


A musical instrument o! 
Quality. Sold and prefer- 
red in 66 countries of the 
world. 


BATTERIES, RADIOS & 
RADIATORS REPAIRED 


T.. ENNO 


Phone 3957 318 G.Rallway St 
MEDICINE HAT 


PIP Re} 6 PPP I PPP IP PII ES 


MONARCH , “Onarcn 
vARN week Andalusian 


Sept. 10th to 15th 4 oumce Ball 
EXTRA SPECIAL 


19c a Ball 


MONARCH 


“DOVE” 
1 ounce Ball 
2 for 35c 


FREE! 


with Every 50c Purchase 
or over , 
A NEEDLE GUAGE 
ora MONARCH 
KNITTING BOOK 


) 


naar 


Plumbing, Heating 
and Repairing 


Roofing a Specialty 
All Work Guaranteed 


Marsh Plumbing Co. 


Medicine Hat 


| 


LePAGE'S, Medicine Hat 


Ladies’ Wear, Men’s and Boys’ Wear, Boots and Shoes 


PPPPPPPLPLPLPLPLL LEI, 
Medicine Hat Annual 


CELEBRATION 


Sept. 27th, 28th, 29th 


Interprovincial 
Sheep Dog Trials 
Parades, Baseball, indian Villiage 


- Whippet Dog Races 


ROTARY CARNIVAL 
Banquets and Entertainment Galore 


THURSDAY, THE 27th, IS SHEEPMEN’S DAY 
and we are anxious to have a Good 
List of Entries for Triais 


Sheepmen Entering Dogs for the Trials 
Please Advise J. A. KING, 651 Second St. 


It Pays to Advertise in The Review 


oF 
: ; per 
+ SEL ABE NRT NETO 


5 
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